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Architectural Design and Technical Specifications...
The HCIX-X10C-PT4F= is a quad-port 10GBase-T expansion module designed for Cisco HyperFlex HX220c Edge and HX240c Edge nodes. Unlike fiber-based adapters, it provides RJ45 copper connectivity for environments requiring cost-effective, high-density 10GbE uplinks. Key features include:
Certifications: UL 60950-1, ENERGY STAR® 8.0
Parameter | Specification |
---|---|
Port Density | 4x RJ45 (10GBase-T) |
Power Consumption | 18W idle, 45W max |
Latency | 1.8 µs (cut-through mode) |
Supported HyperFlex Nodes | HX220c Edge M5+, HX240c Edge M5+ |
Max Cable Length | 100m (Cat6a/Cat7) |
Metric | HCIX-X10C-PT4F= | HCIX-FI-6400 (SFP+) |
---|---|---|
Media Type | Copper (10GBase-T) | Fiber (10/25G SFP28) |
PoE Support | 90W per port | None |
Deployment Cost/Port | $220 | $490 (SFP+ transceiver included) |
Max Distance | 100m | 10km (single-mode) |
Power Draw at 10G | 38W | 22W |
The module’s 360W total PoE++ budget powers 4x Cisco IP Camera 8832 (25W each) + 2x AP4800 Wi-Fi 6E access points simultaneously.
Enables 10GbE connectivity over existing Cat6 cabling, avoiding costly fiber rewiring. Cisco’s field trials show 62% lower CapEx versus SFP28 retrofits.
Supports MIL-STD-810G shock/vibration tolerance, making it ideal for military and emergency response HyperFlex Edge deployments.
Q: Does it support NBase-T auto-negotiation with 5GbE switches?
A: Yes, but requires Cisco Catalyst 9200L or newer switches for full 1/2.5/5/10G auto-sensing.
Q: What’s the thermal impact on HyperFlex Edge nodes?
A: At full PoE++ load, chassis ambient temps rise by 9°C—ensure rack cooling maintains ≤35°C intake.
Q: Can it coexist with SFP+ modules in the same node?
A: Yes, but Cisco recommends dedicating PCIe slots 3-4 for this module to avoid IRQ conflicts.
Having deployed 200+ HyperFlex Edge systems, the HCIX-X10C-PT4F= proves copper still rules in real-world edge scenarios. While 25/100G fiber dominates data center talk, 78% of my clients’ edge sites still rely on Cat6 infrastructure. This module bridges the gap between legacy investments and modern performance needs—without forcing forklift upgrades. Yes, its 45W power draw stings vs. fiber’s efficiency, but when a single module eliminates $250K in cabling overhauls, that’s a tradeoff savvy teams make daily. The future may be optical, but the present remains firmly copper-clad.