04-15-2021 01:45 PM
Good day,
Acquired a pair of R510's, both should still be working.
Customer's previous IT had them both working. 2.4 and 5.0 GHz lights lit up, no other Ruckus equipment or software onsite. Powered via POE Injectors.
We did not have admin access on these devices, customer replaced them with Meraki devices. Why replace perfectly good APs? "Previous IT".
At this point, trying to flatten them to factory and repurpose them, but having severe issues.
Powered via POE Injector - no internet/LAN access, no DHCP (just getting power).
Laptop plugged into wired connection
Laptop wired connection set to: IP: 192.168.0.22, SM: 255.255.255.0, GW: 192.168.0.1, DNS: 192.168.0.1
Can Ping 192.168.0.1
Cannot access webui (192.168.0.1 / unleashed.ruckuswireless.com)
Cannot SSH to device (IP or DNS name)
Disconnect network cable from laptop
Connect to Configure.ME-XXXXXX network - get a 10.154.231.148 IP, with gateway of 10.154.231.125
Can ping 192.168.0.1
Can ping 10.154.231.125
Cannot access webui (192.168.0.1 / 10.154.231.125 / unleashed.ruckuswireless.com)
Cannot SSH to device (192.168.0.1 / 10.154.231.125)
Attempts to access WebUI are via Edge, Chrome, and FireFox.
Hold reset button until power LED turns red (About 8 seconds) - release - wait for reboot to complete (slow flashing green)
Repeat all of the above - no impact
Wait 10 minutes to ensure it's not delayed boot sequence - repeat all of the above - no impact
Hold reset button for 15 seconds (LED red but still holding) - release - wait for reboot to complete (slow flashing green)
Repeat all of the above - no impact
Wait 10 minutes to ensure it's not delayed boot sequence - repeat all of the above - no impact
I've done all of the above with AP1.
AP2: I can access webUI, but not log in - previous IT had changed the password, and we do not have access to that password.
I can process all of the above with AP2, not sure if that's ideal at this stage or not.
Any thoughts?
I've dug through a little documentation here through the forums, and some people seemed to have had the same issues / cases, but they tended to disappear / stop responding at some point.