Question about Default Native VLAN

What is considered „Default“ for the native vlan? I assumed this would be 1 like with almost any other vendor, but if I leave it at this, I lose access to the connected device. I have to set it to 1 to regain access.

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Prefer seeing thing explicitly defined not masked by nebulous terms like default

NATIVE VLAN = 1 is clearer to read.

PoE is ON or OFF , what is the point of default?

If terms like Default are being used, then they should be defined. But in most of the settings pointless and confusing.

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Totally agree, but it doesn’t explain why I have to explicitly use ‘1’. If Default = 1, it should work by simply leaving it at Default.

Could you share more information about where you set this value to trigger the connectivity issue?

Just tried in on a LAN Port. If I leave it on default, I’m losing management access to the connected AP. Maybe this is related to the non-working colors, not sure.

Try changing it back to default and add 1 to the allowed vlan’s.

UNTAGGED should be VLAN 1
TAGGED : ALL or whatvever you need,

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Yes that is correct but for some reason if you set it to default which is vlan 1 you have to tag vlan 1 which doesnt make much sense but it works

If you untag VLAN 1, it means you drop that ID. The interface will let it through and strip it in the process, but after that you don’t have VLAN 1 anymore, so you can’t pass through any further gates.

I have similar problem:

In the port configuration, whether router or switch, we can select Native Vlan and Allowed VLAN
How does it work exactly? Because it seemed to me that NATIVE if set to Default, it advertises VLAN1 which is assigned to Default and Allowed is an additional VLAN on this port. Am I thinking correctly?

However, with my configuration, it turned out that leaving Native on Default does not advertise the addressee assigned to VLAN1. Only when I added VLAN1 in the ALLOWED field did the addressing start… Is it normal?