PoE Converter, 2x 802.3at/48V Passive IN, 4Pair 60W GigE High PoE OUT
$106.95
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Features
Accepts two 802.3at (35W) inputs and combines them into a single 4-pair 60W passive PoE output Enables standard 802.3at PoE switches to power 60W 4-pair High PoE devices without switch replacement Isolated design: input and output are electrically isolated at 1500VDC One input port carries Data and Power; second input port carries Power only 90% minimum efficiency Short circuit and overload protection 10/100/1000Mbps Gigabit Ethernet support 5% load regulation; 1% line regulation and ripple/noise FCC Class B and NE55022 Class B EMC compliance Operating temperature -30 to +60°C (-22 to +140°F) 3-year warranty
Applications
Powering PoE+ (802.3at) devices using standard 802.3af PoE switches Powering high-power wireless radios like Ubiquiti airFiber using 60W 4-pair PoE Upgrading existing PoE infrastructure to support higher-power devices without replacing switches Deploying high-power IP cameras, PTZ cameras, or surveillance systems Enabling PoE-powered industrial or telecom equipment that requires 30W–60W Supporting long-distance or outdoor wireless bridging equipment that needs higher power than standard PoE
Short Description
PoE Converter, 2x 802.3at/48V Passive IN, 4Pair 60W GigE High PoE OUT
Long Description
The POE-CONV-2AF-AT are unique Gigabit PoE converters which allow a customer to use existing PoE switches to provide PoE+ functionality. They work by turning two 802.3af ports into one 802.3at port. The POE-CONV-2AT-60 provide Gigabit PoE conversion, accepting two 802.3at inputs and providing a single 4 Pair 60W Passive PoE output which is compatible with High PoE devices like Ubiquiti airFiber™ There are two RJ45 socket for input and one RJ45 socket for the output. One input accepts Data and Power, the second input accepts only Power. The design is isolated so input and output are isolated. The devices include protections for short circuit and overload. Note: If the inputs come from the same PoE switch then the output power is full power. If the inputs come from different PoE sources, then the output power may be ½.