Skip to main content

    low-voltage troubleshooting

    No data link / port won't connect

    Common symptoms: no link light; ethernet no connection; port won't negotiate; no network on jack; link down

    Stop and call a pro if:

    • confirm the jack is data cabling only — stop if line voltage may be cross-connected
    • never look into a live fiber end face or fiber port (invisible laser radiation)
    • do not disturb fire-alarm initiating circuits while tracing cabling

    Step-by-step diagnostic flow

    1. Step 1

      Is this strictly data cabling (no suspected line-voltage cross-contact) and, if any fiber is involved, will you avoid looking into any port or end face?

      Invisible fiber laser light can damage your eyes; line voltage on a data jack is a shock hazard.

    2. Step 2

      Is this run copper (RJ45) or fiber?

      Copper and fiber fail differently — copper on wiremap/pairs, fiber on polarity/cleanliness.

    3. Step 3

      Are both ends actually connected — device patched in at the jack, and the run patched through to an active switch port at the closet?

      A surprising share of 'dead jacks' are simply not cross-connected at the patch panel.

    4. Step 4

      Is the switch port administratively up, and does the device link on a known-good port/cable?

      Managed switch ports can be shut down or stuck on a forced speed/duplex. Swap one variable at a time.

    5. Step 5

      Are the fiber connectors clean, and is Tx/Rx polarity correct (your Tx into their Rx)? Does swapping/flipping the strands at one end bring up link?

      Most fiber 'no link' issues are a dirty end face or reversed Tx/Rx. Use proper inspection tools — never the naked eye on a live port.

    Possible outcomes

    Stop — resolve the safety concern first

    high confidence

    Possible line-voltage cross-contact or live fiber must be handled safely before tracing or terminating.

    Safe next steps
    • If line voltage may be present, call a licensed electrician
    • Never inspect a powered fiber port or end face
    • Leave fire-alarm circuits undisturbed
    Unsafe or energized run

    Run wasn't cross-connected — now linked

    high confidence

    The jack was live but not patched through to an active switch port; completing the cross-connect brought up link.

    Safe next steps
    • Confirm the device gets an IP / network access
    • Label the patch-panel-to-port mapping

    Switch port was disabled or mis-configured

    high confidence

    An administratively-down port or a forced speed/duplex mismatch prevents link; correcting it restored the connection.

    Safe next steps
    • Leave the port set to auto-negotiate unless there's a reason not to
    • Confirm the port is in the right VLAN for the device
    What to document for a pro
    • Switch model and port number
    • Any required VLAN/speed settings

    Original switch port or patch cord is suspect

    high confidence

    Linking on a known-good port/cable isolates the fault to the original port or patch cord.

    Safe next steps
    • Replace the patch cord or move to a known-good port
    • If a fixed port repeatedly fails, have the switch checked

    Likely cabling fault — verify wiremap

    medium confidence

    No link on a known-good port/cable with both ends patched points to an open, short, reversed, or split pair in the permanent link.

    Safe next steps
    • Run a wiremap/continuity test on the permanent link
    • Re-terminate or repair any open/short/split pair found
    • Re-test after repair
    What to document for a pro
    • Wiremap/continuity result
    • Cable category and approximate length
    • Whether other nearby jacks work

    Fiber polarity/cleanliness corrected — linked

    high confidence

    Reversed Tx/Rx or a contaminated end face is the most common fiber no-link cause; correcting it restored link.

    Safe next steps
    • Confirm stable link and acceptable light levels if you have a meter
    • Cap unused connectors to keep end faces clean

    Fiber still down — escalate to a fiber tech

    low confidence

    Clean, correctly-polarized fiber that won't link may have excessive loss, a broken strand, or an SFP/optic mismatch needing an OTDR/power-meter and proper tooling.

    Safe next steps
    • Stop visually inspecting powered ports
    • Have a fiber tech measure loss and verify the optics match
    What to document for a pro
    • Fiber type (SM/MM) and connector type
    • SFP/optic models at each end
    • Approximate run length and any splice points
    Fiber loss testing requires specialized tools
    Diagnostic guidance only. If unsure, stop and call a licensed professional — gas, electrical, and refrigerant work is hazardous to untrained users.

    Pro launch updates

    Get notified when Pro launches, plus a monthly code-change digest. Email only — no account required.