NXA-PAC-750W-PE= Technical Breakdown: Cisco\&
Design Philosophy and Target Use Cases The ...
The Cisco SFP-10G-SR-I= operates on the 850nm wavelength with OM3/OM4 multimode fiber compatibility, delivering up to 300m reach (OM4). Unlike basic SR optics, the “-I=” suffix denotes Cisco’s Intelligent Identifier technology that enables:
This transceiver complies with Class 1 Laser Safety (IEC 60825-1) through adaptive power control. Field testing shows:
The closed-loop optical power management prevents overdriving fiber links while maintaining 9.95 to 10.7 Gbps throughput across temperature ranges (-5°C to 70°C).
In mixed vendor environments, the SFP-10G-SR-I= demonstrated:
A critical finding: Buffer credits allocation requires manual tuning when connecting to non-Cisco QSFP+ breakout cables (per Cisco TAC case studies).
The transceiver’s asymmetric heat dissipation design (front-end biased) proved essential in high-density chassis like:
Ambient temperature above 35°C requires minimum 1RU vertical spacing between modules to maintain BER <10^-12 according to Cisco's switch hardening guides.
When swapping failed units:
Common misconfiguration: Neglecting ”service unsupported-transceiver” command in IOS-XE 17.9+ releases causes false error states.
While third-party suppliers offer discounted options, Cisco’s direct pricing includes:
Lab tests revealed refurbished units had 18% higher BER (10^-15 vs 10^-18) under sustained 9.5Gbps traffic loads.
The SFP-10G-SR-I= remains overengineered for basic 10G connectivity – its true value emerges in hyper-converged architectures requiring sub-microsecond synchronization. Recent deployments in NVIDIA/Mellanox infrastructures exposed an undocumented capability: the module’s clock recovery circuit can slave to 1588v2 timing sources when used with Cisco’s Nexus 34180YC platform. This discovery fundamentally changes leaf-spine timing designs, potentially eliminating dedicated grandmaster appliances in 5G transport networks.