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Industrial 8 Ports Full Gigabit BT 90W PoE Switch with 2 SFP Uplink

LINOVISIONSKU: POE-SW508G

Price:
Sale price€99,00
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In stock
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Description

  • 8 PORT FULL GIGABIT POE SWITCH - Providing 8*10/100/1000Base-T Ethernet PoE ports and 2*1000Base-X SFP Ports.
  • 4 BT90W PORTS - 1~4 ports support IEEE802.3af/at/bt POE++, deliver up to 90W per port. 5~8 ports support IEEE802.3af/at POE+, up to 30W per port. Total POE budget is 120W.
  • POE WATCHDOG - Realtime monitoring POE load device's status and will automatically reboot POE port when the connected device is not active.
  • REDUNDANT POWER SUPPLY - Support 2 channel DC48-56V redundant power inputs. Supports 8-pin simultaneous power supply and POE Mode A/B output.
  • INDUSTRIAL DESIGN - Designed with the IP40 metal industrial case, wide working temperature –40°C to +75°C; DIN Rail mounting; 6KV surge protection; suitable for harsh environments such as factory, refinery and traffic light control box.
Applications
  • Provide stable PoE power supply for IP cameras, VoIP phones, Wireless AP, etc. 
  • BT90W for high POE power device like PTZ IP camera, PoE lighting, PoE LED, PoE monitor
  • Reliable PoE switch for PoE extenders and PoE over coax converters
  • Bundled with a variety of PoE splitters to provide Ethernet data, DC12V, DC24V, PoE 24V, USB-C outputs
  • Build Long reach PoE power supply system when bundling with PoE extender (up to 200 meters), or with EOC-Converter (up to 1,000 meters)
€99,00 EUR
€99,00 EUR
LINOVISION Industrial 8-Port Full Gigabit Unmanaged POE Switch with 2 SFP Uplinks, 4 BT 90W PoE Ports, POE Watchdog, Redundant Power, DIN-Rail POE Switch for PTZ Camera/POE Lighting/ POE Monitor

Outstanding Features

4 BT90W Ports

  • The 1~4 ports are BT90W Ports, deliver up to 90W power per port, suitable for high-power POE devices, like POE monitor, POE lighting, PTZ camera, etc.

Full Gigabit PoE Switch

  • 8*10/100/1000Base-T Ethernet PoE ports
  • 2*1000Base-X SFP slots (Fiber module is not included).

PoE Watchdog

  • Realtime monitoring PoE load device's status and will automatically reboot PoE port when the connected device is not active

Qualified Power Adapter

  • Offer high quality power adapter with UL Listed

Compatible with more POE Devices

  • Supports 8-pin simultaneous power supply (1/2/4/5 positive, 3/6/7/8 negative)
  • Support POE Mode A and POE Mode B

Industrial Design

  • Designed with the IP40 metal industrial case
  • Supports Wide working temperature -40 °F to +167 °F (–40 °C to +75 °C )
  • 6KV surge protection

Connection Diagram

Application

Package & Installation

Key Specification
Hardware   Specifications
Ports 8* 10/100/1000BASE-T RJ45 auto-MDI/MDI-X ports
2* 1000Mbps SFP Slot
Connector Removable 4-pin terminal block
Pin 1/2 for Power 1; Pin 3/4 for Power 2
LED   Display Power Indicator:   PWR(green).Network Indicator: Link(yellow) SFP: Green
Power   requirements 48~56V DC
Installation DIN-rail kit and   wall-mount kit
Switch   Performance Backplane bandwidth 20Gbps
Packet   forwarding rate 16.86Mpps
MAC   address 4k
Flow   control Back pressure for half duple. IEEE 802.3x pause frame for full duplex
Enclosure IP40 Metal case
ESD   Protection 6KV ESD
Dimension(W   x D x H) 50 x 110 x 150mm   (1.98in x 4.33in x5.91in )
Weight 1Kg
Power   over Ethernet (PoE) Specifications
Network   standard IEEE802.3i 10 BASE-T
IEEE802.3u 100 BASE-TX
IEEE802.3ab 1000BASE-T
IEEE802.3x Flow Control
IEEE802.3af Power over Ethernet
IEEE802.3at Power over Ethernet
IEEE802.3bt Power over Ethernet
IEEE802.3az EEE
PoE   Standard IEEE 802.3af Power over Ethernet/PSE
IEEE 802.3at Power over Ethernet Plus/PSE
IEEE 802.3bt Power over Ethernet Plus+/PSE (1-4 Port)
PoE   Supply Type 12/45(+), 36/78(-)   End-span
PoE   Power Output Per Port 52V DC, 300mA. max. 15.4 watts (IEEE 802.3af)
Per Port 52V DC, 600mA. max. 30 watts (IEEE 802.3at)
Per Port 56V DC, 1720mA. max. 90 watts (IEEE 802.3bt)
Environment
Environment   specification Operating temperature: -40℃~75℃, operating humidity: 5%~95%, Storage temperature: -40℃~75℃, storage humidity: 5%~95%
Warranty 5 Years
Q&A
Resources
Datasheet(1)
User Manual(1)
Video(1)

Customer Reviews

Based on 12 reviews
67%
(8)
33%
(4)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
A
Alain Martinez
la qualit

reste a test la qualit

A
Alain Martinez
la qualit

reste a test la qualit

P
PawPawDog
Having 802.3bt and at compatibility issue with POE extender

This POE switch is more have industrial use than normal household in mind, it is designed with using railed power supply. Although it includes a power supply adapter for regular power outlet, there are power connectors exposed outside the case. Something to be aware of.

It has for POE ports that supply higher wattage output of 802.3bt standard and four POE for 802.3 af/at. There are two SFP ports for none POE uplinks. While SFP ports may be popular in data centers, I don't see the logic to have both none POE ports are SFP instead on at least one using regular RJ45 port. It forces user using the SFP to buy an additional SFP to RJ45 adapter in order to connect this switch with their network.

While I have no issue using this switch directly with POE devices using up to 24W of power, I ran into problem using a 802.3bt compatible POE extender, and the main reason for me to get this switch in the first place.

While I don't have any POE devices require high wattage output of bt, I do have a number of POE devices that require up to 24W at peak use. While normal bt switches can support these devices without problem, I was hoping to simplify the cable routing by using one cable to a cluster of devices and then use an extender to connect them. This requires a switch and an extender to support the bt high wattage output between them in order to have sufficient for the extender to support those devices.

Well, as it turns out, my plan did not work. Not only the extender was not able to support multiple devices, but it was also not even able to support one 24W POE device, in other words the pair could not even handle 820.3at power level. Granted, this compatibility issue may not be this switch's fault. It could be the extender is the problem, so I move the extender to an 802.3at switch to test, and it was able to power up the 24W device without problem. It is clear that when 802.3 hand shack between this switch and the extender did not workout, this switch falls back not to 802.3at but to the even lower power output of 802.3af.

At the end, I was not able to archive what I has hoped with this switch.

P
PawPawDog
Having 802.3bt and at compatibility issue with POE extender

This POE switch is more have industrial use than normal household in mind, it is designed with using railed power supply. Although it includes a power supply adapter for regular power outlet, there are power connectors exposed outside the case. Something to be aware of.

It has for POE ports that supply higher wattage output of 802.3bt standard and four POE for 802.3 af/at. There are two SFP ports for none POE uplinks. While SFP ports may be popular in data centers, I don't see the logic to have both none POE ports are SFP instead on at least one using regular RJ45 port. It forces user using the SFP to buy an additional SFP to RJ45 adapter in order to connect this switch with their network.

While I have no issue using this switch directly with POE devices using up to 24W of power, I ran into problem using a 802.3bt compatible POE extender, and the main reason for me to get this switch in the first place.

While I don't have any POE devices require high wattage output of bt, I do have a number of POE devices that require up to 24W at peak use. While normal bt switches can support these devices without problem, I was hoping to simplify the cable routing by using one cable to a cluster of devices and then use an extender to connect them. This requires a switch and an extender to support the bt high wattage output between them in order to have sufficient for the extender to support those devices.

Well, as it turns out, my plan did not work. Not only the extender was not able to support multiple devices, but it was also not even able to support one 24W POE device, in other words the pair could not even handle 820.3at power level. Granted, this compatibility issue may not be this switch's fault. It could be the extender is the problem, so I move the extender to an 802.3at switch to test, and it was able to power up the 24W device without problem. It is clear that when 802.3 hand shack between this switch and the extender did not workout, this switch falls back not to 802.3at but to the even lower power output of 802.3af.

At the end, I was not able to archive what I has hoped with this switch.

J
Jason and Mary Thompson
Easy to use Switch that works well in a high end home network

In the age of IoT devices, my wireless network was getting crowded. I wanted to move some heavier traffic devices off of the wireless network by using a wired connection. I needed a network switch for my entertainment center and ordered this one. This network switch is more than what I need for my entertainment center. It has eight 1 gig ports that allowed me to wire my devices directly into my network. I wired my Shield, Nintendo Switch, and projector into the switch and was measuring 800+ MBs from each connection. The connections are more stable than they were when I was using WiFi. With Steam Link, I was able to reduce the input latency to less than 1 ms and the video latency to 12ms. This made games that I had trouble playing before playable.

I love that this has a DIN mount connection on the back. This makes it very easy to attach to my wall. The mount slides on and remains in place due to the spring clips. Additionally, this has a couple of features I've yet to take advantage of including the fact that it has 2 SFP ports. For my home use, this works exceptionally well.

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