At one time I would’ve made fun of your English but since I’ve started attempting to learn an Asian language I’ve come to the conclusion this kid speaks perfectly. Great video.
Hi, I have a poe+ switch (48~56Vcc output) and only one camera 12Vcc, can I use the spliter for this case? Does the spliter reduces and stabilize 57Vcc to 12Vcc ?
Yes, You can use the PoE splitter which can separate the power from data and regulate it to DC12V.
If I have an NVR, does the NVR replace the injector? Would I still need an injector if I use an NVR instead?
The purpose of PoE injector is to add power to the Ethernet cable and send it to your edge PoE IP camera. It doesn't overlap with the usage of NVR. If you pick the PoE NVR which has integrated POE switch into NVR box, you don't need the PoE injector or switch anymore.
Hi....I am trying to power an ASUS wifi access point with POE using a POE inverter and then an POE splitter. So similar to your video but instead of an IP camera on the end will have a ASUS router. How to I make sure the POE splitter outputs enough DC power to power up the ASUS router?
I think what you need to verify is the voltage. Most of the PoE splitter outputs DC12V. You must make sure the ASUS router does accept DC12V. Most of the SOHO router needs less than 10W. Even the PoE IEEE802.3af can supply enough power.
if i dont have poe switch(im using non poe switch)..does poe injector will supply power to camera?do i need the spliter too?
Yes, the PoE injector can add the power to the Ethernet cable. Your edge should feature with POE, otherwise, the PoE splitter will be needed. The PoE camera accept the DC48V POE from a switch or injector.
Is there anyway I can use IP Cameras without NVR for live surveillance?
If yes please make a video on it. And congrats you got a Sub.
Thanks for your comment and sorry to keep you waiting. We made a video for you for reference. This is the URL : ua-cam.com/video/R7Nh80NbMV4/v-deo.html
If you still have any questions, please feel free to let us know.
can you use a POE injector soley to deliver power?
Technically you can use the passive PoE injector to send the low voltage power through cat5e or cat6. However, you will need to deal with the voltage drop. Moreover there is no power handshake between the injector and the edge device, I would not recommend unless you know what you are dealing with.
I have ip camera, but i wanted to have nvr, what should i do? I don't really like the wifi nvr
You will need to make sure the IP camera is PoE compatible. Otherwise, you need a POE splitterl to convert and regulate the POE power to DC12V to supply the camera. Next you can either choose PoE NVR or non-POE plus a PoE switch to setup the system. It is critical both IP camera and the NVR support Onvif protocols. The IP camera system doesn't work like the analog camera. It may has compatible issue. The Onvif protocols can settle the compatible issue.
@@Fastcabling Thank You! By the way all my IP cameras supports Onvif, and O am planning to get a POE NVR.
You helped me a lot!
hi, do i need a splitter if i want to use this for a voip phone? i dont plan using the lan port since there is a port on the voip phone for that.
If your VoIP does a feature with PoE, there is no need for a splitter. The PoE splitter separates the power from data, meanwhile, regulate the PoE power to DC12V in most of the design. let's say your VoIP is not PoE compatible. The PoE splitter will provide power (DC12V) and the data to the LAN port of your VoIP. The input port at the PoE splitter will be linked to an injector or POE switch at the back-end. The LAN port has to be occupied.
@@Fastcabling thank you for your answer, but i have 1 more question, is it possible to use a ethernet outlet to plug in for lan?
the camera said 48v i wonder what poe switch i need i found one but cheaper is 70w and the other is 120w what watts in poe camera why not ampere? i am confuse the camera name is besder poe 5mp thanks for help
Usually one camera needs 10-15W around. Some may needs higher power budget. The 70W or 120W is the totally power budget of the PoE switch. You will need to calculate the totally power budget of all your cameras, and compare with the power budget of your switch. One more thing, the power consumption on the Ethernet cable also need to be considered. For example, IEEE 802.3bt output 30W power on the PoE switch, but you only will have 25.5W at the camera end, because it always has power consumption inline which will be converted to heat eventually.
“The centre” 😂
thank god for the subtitles lol, i thoguth he was speaking chinese
What's the point of POE if you are supplying power through coaxial cable? Shouldn't LAN suffice alongside the coaxial?
It is the cat5e cable, not the coaxial cable. You still can use the coaxial to send the PoE but it need special converter both end. Unless it is the system upgrade, you don’t want to wire the new cable, it doesn’t make sense to use coaxial for standard PoE network infrastructure.
@@Fastcabling maybe i wasn't so clear. If you can use a LAN cable from router to camera for data and a separate coaxial cable for power; Wouldn't that be a cheaper solution? I think injectors are more expensive than a simple power adapter + LAN cable.