Yep, pretty much anything you mentioned. Anything which will work with a passive power injector. Notable exceptions: Cambium 320/430 radios (oddly pinned power not compatible with a true gigabit radio), and other radios which try to do everything across the eight pairs and end up breaking compatibility as a result - for instance some of the high end microwave radios which don't do true PoE but instead rely on their own special injector which does everything under the sun.
ETA: Depends on how many projects we can juggle at once. The next 30 days or so are consumed with Wispamerica and trying to get the new 4 port injector released to production. After that happens, we're going to try to simultaneously work on both this project and the 12 port version of the 'din mountable' injector. Assuming that works well, we're looking at probably around 90 days (from now) for both the 12 port and the rackmount unit. But, this all can slip if we need to spin a board. On Tue, Mar 8, 2016 at 1:05 PM, Matt <[email protected]> wrote: > I vote 18 port. Make sure it supports PMP100, PMP450, PMP450i, ePMP, > Mimosa and others. I assume gigabit? Really like idea of being able to > replace in 6 port chunks too. > > ETA? Really liking this product. > > On Tue, Mar 8, 2016 at 1:40 PM, Forrest Christian (List Account) < > [email protected]> wrote: > >> Well, it looks like it might actually be finally happening. >> >> We are about 98% sure we have a rackmount enclosure manufacturer which we >> can work with. Domestic. Product looks decent. Price is right. >> >> Which means it's time to nail down a few details here, such as number of >> ports, so I can get some enclosures cut and boards made and hopefully get >> this elephant out of the room.... >> >> So I need some input: >> >> The rough figures I'm working with here is $800 for a 18 port rackmount >> power injector. Voltage and pinning jumper selectable per port. Per-port >> control of power and sync. Probably some redundant power and other things >> built in, but I'm still nailing those details down (a lot of it comes down >> to space on the front panel of the enclosure). >> >> PLEASE NOTE: The prices here are soft - until I get the design completed >> I won't know what I can sell this for - as many of you know I try to price >> things at a fair price as opposed to what the market will bear. >> >> The main questions I have for the list are: >> >> Is 18 the correct number of ports? 18 is looking like about the most I >> can fit based on front panel dimensions. This corresponds to 3 blocks of 6 >> ports (if you lose a port and need to replace it, you'd replace 6 at a >> time). >> >> Other options are 16 (4 blocks of 4), and pretty much any smaller >> quantities of ports which are divisible by 4 or 6. >> >> I guess what I'm really asking here is whether the 18 port version for >> $800 is the only version of this I should make or carry, or does it make >> sense to sell (as an example) an 8 port version for $400 instead of or in >> addition to this? >> >> >> >> -- >> *Forrest Christian* *CEO**, PacketFlux Technologies, Inc.* >> Tel: 406-449-3345 | Address: 3577 Countryside Road, Helena, MT 59602 >> [email protected] | http://www.packetflux.com >> <http://www.linkedin.com/in/fwchristian> >> <http://facebook.com/packetflux> <http://twitter.com/@packetflux> >> >> > -- *Forrest Christian* *CEO**, PacketFlux Technologies, Inc.* Tel: 406-449-3345 | Address: 3577 Countryside Road, Helena, MT 59602 [email protected] | http://www.packetflux.com <http://www.linkedin.com/in/fwchristian> <http://facebook.com/packetflux> <http://twitter.com/@packetflux>
