My first guess would be the lightning was close enough/powerful enough, to send out an EM Pulse which got picked up by the copper going to the devices. This EM Pulse may have been interpreted at the switchport as the device relinquishing power? Had you tried just unplugging one of the devices from Ethernet, and plugging it back in to reset the PoE exchange? Ken Matlock Network Analyst Exempla Healthcare (303) 467-4671 matlockk@exempla.org -----Original Message----- From: Caleb Tennis [mailto:caleb.tennis@gmail.com] Sent: Thursday, May 13, 2010 9:37 AM To: North American Network Operators Group Subject: POE switches and lightning We had a lightning strike nearby yesterday that looks to have come inside our facility via a feeder circuit that goes outdoors underground to our facility's gate. What's interesting is that various POE switches throughout the entire building seemed to be affected in that some of their ports they just shut down/off. Rebooting these switches brought everything back to life. It didn't impact anything non-POE, and even then, only impacted some devices. But it was spread across the whole building, across multiple switches. I was just curious if anyone had seen anything similar to this before? Our incoming electrical power has surge suppression, and the power to the switches is all through double conversion UPS, so I'm not quite sure why any of them would have been impacted at all. I'm guessing that the strike had some impact on the electrical ground, but I don't know what we can do to prevent future strikes from causing the same issues. Thoughts?