Media Converter In Cisco Packet Tracer Link //free\\ ❲360p — 8K❳

A media converter is a device that connects two different types of networks, such as a copper-based network to a fiber-optic network. It converts the signal from one type of media to another, allowing devices on different networks to communicate with each other.

Go to > Switches and drag a 2960 Switch or a 3650 Multilayer Switch onto the workspace. media converter in cisco packet tracer link

| Mistake | Symptom | Solution | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | The link light on the media converter stays orange/red. | Delete the cable. Use Copper Straight-Thread for RJ45 and Fiber for the SFP side. | | Mismatched SFP types | Fiber link down. | On the switch’s physical tab, ensure the inserted SFP matches the media converter's fiber spec (e.g., LX vs SX). | | Forgetting no shutdown | Line protocol is down. | Manually type no shutdown on both switch interfaces connected to the converter. | | VLAN mismatch | Ping fails despite link lights green. | Ensure both switch interfaces (Fa0/1 on 2960 and Gi0/1 on 3560) are in the same VLAN or both in trunk mode. | | Distance limit ignored | Signal degradation (rare in PT but modeled). | Keep fiber links under 500m in the simulation for SX, and under 10km for LX. | A media converter is a device that connects

You can locate the Media Converter by following these steps: Network Devices category in the bottom-left menu. Select the sub-category. Look for the device labeled Media Converter (often listed as "PT-Empty-Media-Converter" or similar). How to Use a Media Converter | Mistake | Symptom | Solution | |

In the real world, a is a physical device with two ports: one for copper (RJ45) and one for fiber (SC/ST/LC). It converts electrical signals from copper Ethernet into light signals for fiber optics. This allows you to connect a standard Ethernet switch to a distant fiber backbone.