I want to run my nanostation from a battery supply for portable use. I see from the documentation that it uses passive POE and should be happy with 10.5 through to 25Vdc at the port, so as long as the ethernet lead is short I should be able to poke 12v up the right wires and all should work. I wonder if there is a preferred way to do this more elegantly. Is a current limiting circuit recommended? or is a 1A fuse protection enough? I wonder what others have done and are there any good or more importantly bad experiences with this.
Regards
David
Regards
David
I have used a variety of these injectors with success at 12 VDC over Ethernet cables as long as 125 feet.
Yes, you want to put a fuse in the circuit. I'm running other gear at my solar/battery site so I have 10 amp fuses.
battery -> fuse -> wire to passive POE injector -> outdoor, shielded CAT5 to device
I've used these from eBay:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/2X-Passive-PoE-Injector-Splitter-Over-Ethernet-A...
Good luck! MB
A 10 Amp fuse at the battery to the main 12 Volt feeder may be fine, but I'd suggest a much smaller fuse, maybe 1 or 1.5 Amp at the individual POE injector input. I'm pretty new to the Ubiquity world, but as I understand, they draw about 800 ma or less, depending on power. Hopefully someone more knowledgeable than I will chime in on this.
Burt, K6OQK
You have to ask what you're protecting with the fuse. You aren't protecting the equipment. You can't "force" too much current into the radio. The purpose of the fuse is to protect the wiring and to keep the battery from blowing up.
Ruud
David