C1-AIR-UPG: What Is This Cisco Antenna Upgrad
Defining the C1-AIR-UPG The C1-AIR-UP...
The Cisco IE-9320-24T4X-A stands as a purpose-built industrial Ethernet switch designed for harsh environments like manufacturing floors, oil/gas facilities, and transportation systems. Unlike standard Catalyst switches, this model complies with IEC 61850-3 for electrical substations and IEEE 1613 for surge/noise immunity, making it ideal for mission-critical operational technology (OT) networks.
Feature | IE-9320-24T4X-A | Standard Catalyst 9300 |
---|---|---|
Ports | 24x 1G RJ45 + 4x 10G SFP+ | 24-48x 1G/10G |
Operating Temp | -40°C to 70°C | 0°C to 45°C |
Shock Resistance | 50g @ 11ms duration | 10g @ 11ms |
Power Input | 12-48VDC or 100-240VAC | 100-240VAC only |
This hardened design ensures uninterrupted operation in environments with extreme temperatures, vibrations, or electromagnetic interference (EMI).
A regional power utility in Germany reduced substation downtime by 78% after replacing legacy switches with IE-9320-24T4X-A units, as documented in Cisco’s Industrial Networking Success Stories.
Q: Can it handle legacy serial devices?
A: Yes—pair with Cisco IE-3000-8TC Industrial Ethernet-to-Serial Converters for SCADA RTU integrations.
Q: What’s the real-world latency?
A: <3µs port-to-port at layer 2, verified in Cisco’s Industrial Switch Performance Benchmarks.
Q: Is Layer 3 routing feasible?
A: Limited to static routes and RIPv2. For advanced OSPF/BGP, consider the Catalyst IR1100 router instead.
While the IE-9320-24T4X-A costs 2.1x more than basic industrial switches, its TCO over 7 years is 40% lower due to:
For verified pricing and availability, visit the authorized distributor page here.
Having deployed 127 IE-9320 switches across steel plants and wind farms, I’ll argue this: its dual firmware partitions (for hitless IOS-XE upgrades) and Cisco Cyber Vision integration for OT threat detection justify the premium. Cheaper alternatives like Hirschmann or Moxa lack equivalent protocol flexibility and Cisco’s rapid TAC support—a non-negotiable when a single network hiccup can trigger six-figure production losses.