mikrotik lcd touch screen manufacturer
RouterBOARD 2011U and CCR series devices are equipped with a resistive touchscreen, for quick access to device stats and simple configuration options. Touchscreen requires pressure against the surface to register a touch, therefore light swipes and quick/short taps might not get registered (as opposed to a capacitive touchscreen commonly found on phones). If you find trouble operating the screen with your finger, you can also try a stylus, or opposite end of a pen.
Before the LCD touchscreen can be used, it needs to be calibrated at least once. After the first successful calibration, data is stored on the router. If no calibration values are present, calibration process will start automatically.
Take-screenshot function allows to create BMP image of currently displayed LCD screen and saves it in File List with specified name. Screenshots without file name are not saved, screenshots with an existing file name are overwritten.
Interfaces menu provide configuration for interface display timing in Stat Slideshow. Up to 10 additional (non-physical) interfaces can be added to the LCD.
Maximum interface speed that is used to determine bandwidth usage in All interface graphs and Interfaces screens. "auto" value can be set only for physical interfaces.
A Page is an screen that can contain up to 12 interface bar graphs. Sub-menu allows to configure which interfaces are shown in a page. Up to 5 pages can be added to all interface graph screen and up to 12 interfaces per page. To add an interface to a page, it first must be added under /lcd interfaces sub-menu.
PIN code number allows to protect sensitive menus on the LCD screen. The PIN number will be asked if Read-Only mode is disabled and you add an IP address, reset or reboot the router. Default PIN is 1234
Since v6.0, LCD has a menu structure. Menu screens consist of buttons that are used to navigate the menus. A scrollbar is shown on the right side of the screen if it does not fit on the actual display. The screen can be dragged up or down to access more options if they are available. At the top of each menu screen is a "Back" button that jumps to the previous screen.
If the router has default configuration - user named "admin" with no password, then a warning on LCD will appear. This screen shows IP"s assigned to the interfaces which could be used to connect to the router.
Interfaces menu displays all the Ethernet and Wireless interfaces. Bandwidth usage is shown similar to the All interface graph screen. From the Interfaces screen you can choose a specific interface to look at.
If a tap lands into the top right corner of the screen (square box 1/4 of the screen height), info time interval is changed: Min -> Hour -> Daily -> Weekly -> Min...
All interface graph screen shows the RX/TX bandwidth usage about all interfaces. The max values are calculated like this - for Ethernet interfaces it"s the negotiated rate or set speed. For wireless interfaces it"s calculated from used band, channel-width and chain count using the theoretical values. The goal of this screen is to see how values are related to each other for a single interface.
Stat Slideshow screen is similar to the "Stats" screen, but the interfaces are switched after they timeout. Settings for slideshow are stored in RouterOS submenu /lcd interface
These screens are only available when Read-Only mode is disabled. To access any of the screens, the Pin number must be entered. If the Pin authentication is successful, the user must confirm the desired action by pressing the "Yes" button, or cancel by pressing - "No".
I just bought a RB2011UAS-2HND-IN, the touch screen is incredible insensitive. After many tries I may be able to change screen (if I have the luck on my side). I tried “/lcd reset-calibration”, but there are no reaction when I try to press on the first “X”.
No improvements for the calibration, it doesen"t register when I press the "X". Tried finger, nail and stylus. Pressing, holding, swiping, no response what so ever. The touch it self seems littlebit more responsive, could be just me geting used to it...
Mine RB2011UAS-2HnD-IN is the same -touch display is unresponsive and/or defect - only some kinds of triangles appears on it with message Interface down. Shame.
Mine RB2011UAS-2HnD-IN is the same -touch display is unresponsive and/or defect - only some kinds of triangles appears on it with message Interface down. Shame.
These settings are not correct. LCD touchscreen is configurable under "/lcd" menu. "/system lcd" menu from optional LCD package is used for LCD displays.
I"ve done all upgrades (now I"m in firmware 3.0 and routerOS 5.21, bundled version was rOs 5.20) but the calibration still not work: I"m not able to register the first cross to push due to unresponsive screen.
I"ve done all upgrades (now I"m in firmware 3.0 and routerOS 5.21, bundled version was rOs 5.20) but the calibration still not work: I"m not able to register the first cross to push due to unresponsive screen.
im actually purchased my 2011[non-RM wariant with WiFi and LCD] and nearly start feel sorry about not picking RackMount-version instead[despite absence of (rarely used until now)WiFi], because fragile-looking enclosure, [not laugh:]red color in front and LCD in weird state - protective cover scrateched, partially removed["by force"]/twisted and half-screen not touch sensetive.
after reading THIS thread i discover than LCD was left in "Disabled" state and locked to [not used yet]SFP cage. i guess wrong defaults in RouterOS config[i was used 6.0rc5].
After upgrade from 5.22 to 6.rc05 and clean netinstall again 5.22 /rc05 is full of bugs / and reconfig my home router ,I saw that lcd not working properly - but
Mine RB2011UAS-2HnD-IN is the same -touch display is unresponsive and/or defect - only some kinds of triangles appears on it with message Interface down. Shame.
These settings are not correct. LCD touchscreen is configurable under "/lcd" menu. "/system lcd" menu from optional LCD package is used for LCD displays.
I need to know what correct settings are. They are not given here. They are not given in the manual. After installing lcd package I also had settings reset to "set contrast=0 enabled=yes port=serial0 type=24x4"
CLI has lcd and system -> lcd, but lcd settings are not effective. backlight-timeout: 5m, but backlight does not turn off. Backlight obeyed set timeout originally. Installing and removing lcd package broke something. Now what?
for example - inpredictible touch sensetivity feats[regardless accuracy/pressure], ignore settings from LCD portion of settings[from CLI], randomly shuffling slideshow on random interface, ignore "backlight" timer setting.
Probably the selected serial port is used by PPP client or server, or by the serial console. Check the availability and use of the ports by examining the output of the /port print command. Alternatively, select another port for connecting the LCD, or free up the desired port by disabling the related resource
RB3011UiAS-RM Unit comes with 1U rackmount enclosure, a touchscreen LCD panel, a serial console port and PoE output functionality on the last Ethernet port.
[ 0.000000] Kernel command line: benand_no_swecc lcd_ctrl=84 parts=1 boot_part_size=4194304 gpio=249403 HZ=300000000 mem=128M kmac=CC:2D:E0:03:8E:B1 board=2011r5 board=2011r5 ver=6.45.7 bver=3.41 hw_opt=00718004 boot=1 mlc=11 console=ttyS0,115200 rootfstype=squashfs noinitrd
RB3011UiAS-RM - The RB3011UiAS-RM is a 10-port device and the first from MikroTik to be running an ARM architecture CPU for higher performance than ever before. The RB3011UiAS-RM is a 10-port device and the first from MikroTik to be running an ARM architecture CPU for higher performance than ever before. The RB3011 has ten Gigabit ports divided in two switch groups, an SFP cage and for the first time a Superspeed full size USB 3.0 port, for adding storage or an external 3G/4G modem. The unit comes with a 1U rackmount enclosure, a touchscreen LCD panel, a serial console port and PoE output functionality on the last Ethernet port.
Product Features • ARM architecture CPU • More than 2 x performance of RB2011 series • 10 x Gigabit, USB 3.0 • LCD Display • Serial Console Port Product
• OS: MikroTik RouterOS, Level 5 license Product Includes (1) RB3011UiAS-RM (1) Power Supply (1) Rackmount Enclosure Technical Data Sheets and User Manuals RB3011UiAS-RM Data Sheet RB3011UiAS-RM Quick Setup Guide _DELETE_
Founded in Latvia in 1996, MikroTik is an industry leading network equipment manufacturer that is present in many countries around the world today. Since beginning as a wireless ISP systems manufacturer developing routers, MikroTik has continued to expand its brand, creating the RouterOS operating system and RouterBOARD hardware. Known for creating quality components at a low cost, MikroTik provides an excellent solution for securing and monitoring your network. Whether you are searching for a Mikrotik switch, a Mikrotik antenna, Mikrotik license or the newest Cloudcore router, we’ve got the solution for you.
Baltic Networks has been an Authorized MikroTik Partner since 2009. As distributors, we offer a complete line of MikroTik products including custom solutions made for Mikrotik that you won’t find anywhere else . As consultants, our MikroTik Certified Engineers offer a full spectrum of network engineering services with in-depth expertise of RouterOS, designing network infrastructure, troubleshooting, specific setup of VPN, bandwidth shaping and so on. As trainers, we are a Certified MikroTik Training Center offering a full spectrum of MikroTik training programs leading to a full certification as a MikroTik Certified Associate or Engineer.
7X Gigabit Ethernet, 1x Combo port (SFP or Gigabit Ethernet), 1xSFP+ cage, 9 cores x 1GHz CPU, 2GB RAM, LCD panel, passive cooling desktop enclosure, SmartCard slot, RouterOS L6, PSU
RouterBOARD 2011UiAS-RM, in comparison with RB2011L series, not only has five Gigabit LAN ports and five Fast Ethernet LAN ports, but also has RJ45 serial port, USB port and more RAM (128MB instead of 64MB). Also, it has RouterOS L5 license (instead of L4) and nice touchscreen LCD for configuration. SFP cage is also present (SFP module not included!)
Our MikroTik CSS326-24G-2S+RM review has been a long time coming. While we recently reviewed the MikroTik CRS326-24G-2S+RM, the CSS version is very similar but importantly different. The two big differences that the majority of those using the two side-by-side will notice are pricing and OS. From a price perspective, this is a $37-50 lower street price switch. When looking at the OS, the CSS version can only run MikroTik’s newer SwOS and not its more widespread RouterOS. In this review, we are going to discuss why that is a trade-off the STH team has made many times over the past several quarters.
The MikroTik CSS326-24G-2S+RM we are reviewing is a short depth rack mount model measuring 440mm x 144mm x 44mm. That is the same size as the CRS model. The business end has three blocks of eight RJ-45 gigabit Ethernet ports, and two SFP+ 10 gigabit Ethernet ports.
The major change here is a lack of a serial console port. That is a deletion in order to lower costs. Like the CRS326 model, MikroTik does not include LCD screen we saw on the CRS226 model. That is OK, as the touchscreen LCD was sometimes difficult to use and it adds cost. What MikroTik did a great job of is removing costs in this model which sells for closer to $140 versus the previous generation at $299.
The rear of the unit has a DC input and some retention prongs. We just wanted to point out for a moment that the power situation is not ideal. MikroTik is using low-cost external adapters instead of internal power supplies. On desktop units, this works fine. On rackmount or “RM” units like the CRS326-24G-2S+RM one has to find a way to mount a power supply that is not-meant-for-racks. We really wish MikroTik would change to internal power supplies. In fact, we have dozens of the CRS326-24G-2S+RM and CRS226-24G-2S+RM/ IN models installed and have lost 2 power supplies in 4 years. You can get higher-quality external DC power supplies, but that adds cost and does not fix the mounting problem. This is clearly a cost optimization play, but it is one that we would rather spend a few dollars on higher quality.
If you have a home or small office network that you do not need PoE, then the MikroTik CRS326-24G-2S+RM is a great option for connecting a lot of devices. If you, for example, had a lot of 1GbE devices and a 10GbE NAS and workstation, then this may be the only switch you need. One item that may help in that cause is the MikroTik S+RJ10 which is a SFP+ module that can run at 2.5/5/10Gbase-T speeds.
The MikroTik CSS326-24G-2S+RM can run only SwOS, MikroTik’s Switch OS. It cannot run RouterOS which is a more feature-rich network operating system that the company uses on its routing products.
We typically use these for fairly simple networking either with flat networks or using some VLANs but without routing. Since our typical network usage is small file transfers when we are doing things like loading ISOs via IPMI or running management tasks. If you need highly specialized networking or the lowest latency switch, you probably are not looking at the $140 price bracket. For its intended use, it is fine. Here are the official switching results from MikroTik:
In racks, these are almost perfect BMC out-of-band management switches. You can put a rack of 2U servers all into one of these switches and then manage them all via a SFP+ uplink port for the rest of the network, keeping everything well segmented. The company has a variety of SFP+ offerings that are relatively inexpensive for given port counts such as the MikroTik CRS305-1G-4S+IN, MikroTik CRS309-1G-8S+IN, MikroTik CRS312-4C+8XG-RM, and MikroTik CRS326-24S+2Q+RM. It also works well in budget/ edge locations where you have 1GbE software control planes such as for VMware, but also need to put management interfaces on their own VLAN.
Although MikroTik’s SwOS went through some teething issues, it is also a very easy way for novice admins to manage their switches. It is better than having no management solution at all such as with an unmanaged device. It is also better for the SMB and SOHO markets than having only a proprietary CLI.
RouterBOARD 2011UiAS-IN, in comparison with RB2011L series, not only has five Gigabit LAN ports and five Fast Ethernet LAN ports, but also has RJ45 serial port, Full Size USB Connector and more RAM (128MB instead of 64MB). Also, it has RouterOS L5 license (instead of L4) and nice touchscreen LCD for configuration. SFP cage is also present (SFP module not included!)
New MIKROTIK flagship router, the CCR1072, is powered by a Tilera 72 core CPU, each core is clocked at 1GHz, and to fully utilise this power, the CCR1072 is equipped with eight independently connected 10G SFP+ ports.
The unit comes equipped with installed RouterOS L6, 16GB of built in ECC RAM, touchscreen color LCD, two removable (hotplug) power supplies for redundancy, smart card slot, microUSB, regular size USB, microSD and 2x M.2 slots for additional storage.