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Victron energy Color Control GX - Q16: What Is the Functionality Behind the Menu Item Remote Support (SSH) in the Ethernet Menu; Q17: I Dont See Support for Ve.net Products in the List, Is that Still Coming; Q18: What Is the Data Usage of the Color Control GX; Q19: How Many AC Current Sensors Can I Connect in One Ve.bus System

Victron energy Color Control GX
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MQTT on LAN:
When enabled, a local MQTT broker is started, which accepts TCP connections on port 8883 (SSL) and 1883 (Plain text).
Depending on, the CCGX will also (try to) connect to the Victron MQTT cloud servers. This connection always uses SSL and
port 8883.
Remote Console on LAN:
Remote Console on LAN requires port 80 (small website hosted the GX device). And also requires port 81, which is the
listening port for the websocket tunnel to VNC.
Modbus TCP:
When enabled, the ModbusTCP server listens on the common designated port for Modbus TCP, which is 502.
SSH Root Access:
Port 22 - see the Venus OS root access documentation.
This is a software developers feature.
18.2.16. Q16: What is the functionality behind the menu item Remote support (SSH) in the
Ethernet menu?
When enabled, the Color Control GX will open a SSH connection to our secure server, with a reverse tunnel back to the Color
Control GX. Through this tunnel, Victron engineers can login to your Color Control GX and perform remote support. This works
when the Color Control GX is installed on an internet connection. The connection will even work when installed behind a firewall.
The SSH connection will be outbound, to port 80, 22 or 443 to supporthosts.victronenergy.com, which resolves to multiple IP
addresses and depends on your location. Remote support functionality is disabled by default.
18.2.17. Q17: I don’t see support for VE.Net products in the list, is that still coming?
No.
18.2.18. Q18: What is the data usage of the Color Control GX?
Data usage depends heavily on amount of connected products, and behavior and usage of those products. The measurements
below are an indication only, and taken from a system with one CCGX, one Multi, one BMV and one MPPT. Log interval set to 15
minutes. If you are on an expensive data-plan, do make some fail-safe.
Data consumption per month:
VRM logging: 15MB download, 45MB upload
Remote support: 22MB download, 40MB upload
Update checks: 8MB download, 0.3MB upload (This does not include the update itself)
2 way communication: 26MB download, 48MB upload
Mentioned megabytes do not include the download of a Color Control GX firmware update. Firmware updates of 60MB are not
uncommon.
18.2.19. Q19: How many AC Current Sensors can I connect in one VE.Bus system?
The current maximum is 9 sensors (since Color Control GX v1.31). Note that each need to be configured separately with an
assistant in the Multi or Quattro to which it is wired.
18.2.20. Q20: Issues with Multi not starting when CCGX is connected / Caution when powering
the CCGX from the AC-out terminal of a VE.Bus Inverter, Multi or Quattro
Make sure that the GX device and MultiPlus is running the latest firmware version.
If you power the CCGX from an AC adaptor connected to the AC-out port of any VE.Bus product (Inverter, Multi or Quattro),
then a deadlock can occur after the VE.Bus products are powered-down for any reason (after any operational fault or during a
black start). The VE.Bus devices will not boot-up until the CCGX has power …but the CCGX will not boot-up until it has power.
See FAQ for more information about this.
This deadlock can be rectified by briefly unplugging the CCGX VE.Bus cable at which point you will observe the VE.Bus products
will immediately begin to boot-up.
Color Control GX Manual
Page 112 Troubleshooting

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