21
Connecting to the Ethernet Port
78-4339-09
Replacing a GRP
MII Connections
The MII connection requires an external physical sublayer (PHY) and an external transceiver. Depending
on the type of media you use between the MII connection on the GRP and your switch or hub, the
network side of your 100BASE-T transceiver should be appropriately equipped—with SC-type or
ST-type connectors (for optical fiber), BNC connectors, and so forth.
Figure 9
shows the pin orientation
of the female MII receptacle on GRP.
The MII receptacle uses two screw-type locks, called
jackscrews
(see
Figure 9
), to secure the cable or
transceiver to the MII port. MII cables and transceivers have knurled thumbscrews (screws that you can
tighten with your fingers) that you fasten to the jackscrews on the GRP’s MII connector. Use the
jackscrews to provide strain relief for your MII cable. (The RJ-45 modular plug has strain relief
functionality incorporated into the design of its standard plastic connector.)
Figure 9
MII Receptacle (Horizontal Orientation)
Table 5
lists the MII connector pinout and signals. MII cables and transceivers are not available from
Cisco Systems, but are available commercially.
Jackscrew
Pin 21
Pin 1
H6538
Table 5
MII Receptacle Pinout
Pin
1
1.
Any pins not indicated are not used.
Signal
Input
Output
Input/Output
Description
14 to 17
TxD
—
Yes
—
Transmit Data
12
Tx_CLK
Yes
—
—
Transmit Clock
2
2.
The signals Tx_CLK and Rx_CLK are generated by the external transceiver.
11
Tx_ER
—
Yes
—
Transmit Error
13
Tx_EN
—
Yes
—
Transmit Enable
3
MDC
—
Yes
—
MII Data Clock
4 to 7
RxD
Yes
—
—
Receive Data
9
Rx_CLK
Yes
—
—
Receive Clock
10
Rx_ER
Yes
—
—
Receive Error
8
Rx_DV
Yes
—
—
Receive Data Valid
18
COL
Yes
—
—
Collision
19
CRS
Yes
—
—
Carrier Sense
2
MDIO
—
—
Yes
MII Data
Input/Output
22 to 39
GND
—
—
—
Common ground
1, 20, 21, 40 V
—
—
—
+5.0 VDC