On 2/10/13 8:22 AM, Chris Albertson wrote:
On Sun, Feb 10, 2013 at 12:40 AM, David J Taylor
<[email protected]> wrote:
- although I've never used it, I do like Chris's suggestion of power over
Ethernet. I see dozens of choices in Amazon's lists - is there a standard
for the power adapter and level?
Yes there is a standard but there are also may non-standard implementations.
I was a little worried about the comment regarding "isolation" being
hard to implement. The standard for Ethernet required galvanic
isolation on all Ethernet ports by use of a transformer. So POE
simply buts a DC bias on the wire. I think it can provide 12 Watts of
power
More like, it can provide 0.25 Amps.. that's 12W at the nominal 48VDC.
I suspect that current is the limiting aspect. Actually, Wikipedia says
350 mA at 44V at the load.. 48V at the source end, probably.
Yes, what PoE does is put a common mode voltage on each of the pairs,
with the assumption that you will have a *galvanically isolated* DC/DC
converter at the load end.
The catalogs are full of little DC/DC bricks intended for just this sort
of application. And, the transformers that go between the PHY and the
jack to provide the isolation that Ethernet already requires, but which
have the center tap for the PoE.
(and, I assume, though I haven't looked, there are probably integrated
PoE power injectors which do the same)
I think PoE is a great thing, because it allows you to get rid of all
those wallwarts..
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