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Broadband-Hamnet™ Forum :: Hardware |
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Subject :PoE any good or bad thoughts?..
2011-01-21- 04:37:11
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K4RJJ |
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Joined: 2011-01-08- 11:57:13
Posts: 31
Location: Dallas GA |
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Are there any bad brands out there? Does anyone make one that has Powerpoles built in?
What brand is everyone using? I want to buy about 3 sets that will work on very long ethernet runs.
Thanks!
Ronny
K4RJJ
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Subject :Re:PoE any good or bad thoughts?..
2012-01-14- 20:56:37
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Joined: 2024-11-22- 12:46:36
Posts: 0
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Check out packetflux.com for a DC power system that can drive ubiquiti gear. Pretty cool stuff. |
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Subject :Re:PoE any good or bad thoughts?..
2012-02-28- 17:02:53
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W5LMM |
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Joined: 2012-02-13- 18:18:04
Posts: 126
Location: Albuquerque, NM |
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My thoughts on this are, a small battery, solar panel, and charge controller.
All these units are 12v (+-) and small 12v solar panels and a gel cell should be sufficient for the low power that is involved.
This would be great for nodes that are filling space in-between the mesh rather than connected nodes. If you're connecting a computer to it anyway, might as well run power up there. HOWEVER. if you have LONG runs, like up a tower, the solar option might be better due to the losses you will find with ethernet. |
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Subject :Re:PoE any good or bad thoughts?..
2012-04-16- 16:18:03
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NN5I |
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Joined: 2012-04-01- 12:06:21
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These posts intrigue me. If you're running 100BaseTX and not Gigabit ethernet connections, which is certainly the case with WRT54xx routers, only four of the eight conductors in the Cat5 or Cat5e cable are used anyway. Why not just separate the other four conductors locally at each end and use them for power, instead of spending anything at all on PoE splitters? That's probably all the PoE devices do anyway, eh? |
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-- Carl |
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Subject :Re:PoE any good or bad thoughts?..
2012-04-16- 17:03:33
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Subject :Re:PoE any good or bad thoughts?..
2012-04-16- 17:09:41
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NN5I |
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Joined: 2012-04-01- 12:06:21
Posts: 17
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Well, if they're only $2 that's not so bad, is it. :-) |
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-- Carl |
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Subject :Re:PoE any good or bad thoughts?..
2012-04-16- 17:59:21
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W5LMM |
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Joined: 2012-02-13- 18:18:04
Posts: 126
Location: Albuquerque, NM |
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Just remember if you have long cable runs, you will need to calculate loss for those cable diameters, and increase your input power accordingly. |
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Subject :Re:Re:PoE any good or bad thoughts?..
2012-04-18- 09:06:34
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NN5I |
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Joined: 2012-04-01- 12:06:21
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I've run WRT54G and GS directly from the 13.8v supply in my motor home (which often is about 14.5v), and I've run them on 9v wall-warts. Except for WRT54Gv1, they have internal 5v regulators. The regulator runs a little hotter on higher voltages because it's dropping the input a little more, but I've never had one fail. Anyway, I wouldn't worry about the losses from a 12v supply working over a couple hundred feet of CAT5e.
[W5LMM 2012-04-16- 17:59:21]:
Just remember if you have long cable runs, you will need to calculate loss for those cable diameters, and increase your input power accordingly. |
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Last Edited On: 2012-04-18- 09:12:10 By NN5I for the Reason |
-- Carl |
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Subject :Re:PoE any good or bad thoughts?..
2012-04-19- 17:56:04
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ae5ae |
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Joined: 2010-10-27- 00:47:17
Posts: 144
Location: Van Alstyne, TX |
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The real problem of running PoE on umpteen hundred feet of CAT5e
is the inductance! It causes problems when the current used by the WRT54G fluctuates!
It can AND will vary quite a bit.
This can be fixed by installing a large capacitor in parallel to the
WRT54G at its end of the power cable. Kip, AE5IB, found that a nice large
electrolytic around 10,000-uF provided sufficient capacitance. Yes,
smaller values were tried with the 180-ft of CAT5 cable that was in
use but they didn't keep the router from going a bit nuts.
-Rusty- |
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Last Edited On: 2012-04-19- 18:00:35 By ae5ae for the Reason |
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Subject :Re:PoE any good or bad thoughts?..
2012-04-19- 18:42:29
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NN5I |
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Joined: 2012-04-01- 12:06:21
Posts: 17
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Time to put on my EE hat. Retired now, I'm an old design engineer.
The inductance is easily avoidable. The four unused conductors in a Cat5e cable consist of two twisted pairs. If you blithely use one twisted pair for the positive, and the other for the negative, then, sure enough, the inductance could be a problem.
If, however, you wire it so that the conductors in each twisted pair are carrying equal and opposite currents, the inductance will be reduced by as much as several orders of magnitude. This occurs because inductance depends upon the creation of a magnetic field surrounding the wires -- and if two conductors are intimately close together and carrying equal currents in opposite directions they don't create a significant magnetic field -- the magnetic field each member of the pair would create is canceled by the other. Thus they'll have very little inductance.
That's why the wires are twisted in the first place -- in order to avoid magnetic effects, which might couple them to other pairs. Don't want that.
I'll bet your friend never thought about that, and used one pair in one direction, and the other pair in the other direction. Bad practice. |
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Last Edited On: 2012-04-19- 18:56:02 By NN5I for the Reason |
-- Carl |
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Subject :Re:PoE any good or bad thoughts?..
2012-04-19- 19:32:10
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NN5I |
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Joined: 2012-04-01- 12:06:21
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Another thought: 10,000 μF is awfully large, and suggests your friend didn't know that electrolytic capacitors typically have considerable inductance of their own, making them useless for bypassing high-frequency transients. The load variations you're talking about contain both low frequencies (which you would bypass with an electrolytic capacitor) and quite high frequencies into the GHz (which you would bypass, for example, with a ceramic, mica, or styrene capacitor).
If your friend had used, say, a 100μF electrolytic capacitor and a 0.1 μF ceramic capacitor in parallel, with short leads, he probably would have found that, even with inductance in the supply leads, operation would have been solid. After all, anyone who ever designed power supplies knows that inductance in power-supply leads is generally a good thing. |
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Last Edited On: 2012-04-19- 21:24:15 By NN5I for the Reason |
-- Carl |
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Subject :Re:PoE any good or bad thoughts?..
2012-04-25- 11:00:55
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ae5ae |
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Joined: 2010-10-27- 00:47:17
Posts: 144
Location: Van Alstyne, TX |
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Carl, I agree that running opposite currents in each twisted pair is good and the plan when running non-DC signals but, bad design or not, one pair in one direction and one pair in the other is the IEEE standard (802.3af/802.3at) for PoE -- pairs 4&5 are DC+ and 7&8 are DC-. Doing it otherwise would force us to make our own PoE adapters. Granted, that isn't difficult but not desired.
Not sure if the Kipster used 100μF in parallel with a 0.1μF or not -- that was my first suggestion (EE Power Supplies 101). Still, I would think that such a combo was already on the input side of the '54G's regulator and it's hard to drag most o'scopes up to the top of a water tower to find out if the problem is transients or not. (No, a small handheld 'scope wasn't available) We can guess/estimate/engineer all we want but the fact of the matter is that the 10,000μF cap did do the trick and it was left that way. Thanks for your input nonetheless!
-Rusty- |
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Last Edited On: 2012-04-25- 11:02:06 By ae5ae for the Reason reformat |
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Subject :Re:PoE any good or bad thoughts?..
2012-04-25- 11:23:16
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NN5I |
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Joined: 2012-04-01- 12:06:21
Posts: 17
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Hi Rusty --
Yes -- about an hour after I posted, I looked up the IEEE standard and found that it is just as you say. Hard to believe. I think IEEE blew that one.
In any event, after further thought I doubt that the original trouble was inductance anyway, or varying load either; I would guess it's really noise pickup, and I'd probably try some small capacitances first, maybe with a little hand-wound choke. But from my armchair there's no real way to know.
Incidentally, in the MH, in addition to a Tektronix 775A which I definitely wouldn't try to take up a tower, I've got a very nice little Fluke that would fit in a climbing-belt toolbag. But (unlike the nice 350MHz Tek) the Fluke isn't fast enough to be useful in finding impulse noise. Being an old guy, I've never really learned to use that Fluke the way I use the Tek, which is second nature, like walking or talking.
Ah, well, everything seems to devolve to "try and see" after all. Thanks for the good words! |
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-- Carl |
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