Forum. I’m wondering if anyone is using PoE switches for powering RB 532s? I noticed the IEEE language states no more than 12.5 watts of draw and if my calculations are correct, we need 15.8 watts to power the RB 532 ?
neither the Netgear FS116P or the FS726TP PoE switchs will work with the RB532. I don’t know why, netgear told me that they would ship me a “free” FSM7326P to try, but I would have to purchase it if the switch powered worked and my devices (the MSRP is $1750) so I declined the offer.
has anyone else had any luck with powering the RB532’s with a PoE switch? I want to clean up my wireing at the base of my towers and get rid of all those PoE injectors…
Does anyone know what the power draw is on the 532 boards via the PoE port? We know the PoE injectors are 48 volt, but does this mean that we must use 48volt PoEs, if not, we may be able to get a switch that will put out enough power to light up these boards and clean things up at our main tower and microPoP locations.
AFAIK, the 802.3af standard provides for both power-on-data-pair AND power-on-spare-pair, so a true 802.3af powering device (wether a switch or a mid-span injector) should be able to support both.
Again AFAIK, MikroTik RB’s only support the power-on-spare-pair type.
It seems that the RB532 are not 802.3af conform. They seem to only support powering on the spare-pair (4-5(+) and 7-8(-)) ...
There are several devices on the market that pretend to support 802.3af and many of them only support one of the three methods.
Up to now we only found Lancom Accesspoints that support all three powering methods,
Hi try to connect rb522 to a PoE switch shuch as Netgear 108PEU and not work. If conmute the data cables 1&2 to 4&5 and 3&6 to 7&8 the device is power up and work. The power comsuption is under 15,5w.
i see this topic is pretty much closed but i wanted to add this;
my dell 3424p poe swtich will provide upto 15.7watts per port…its a great sw, but as described does not power RB’s or WRAP boards…since i have 15 wrap AP’s at this install this was a problem. so Pacific wireless makes these POE splitters that work great…gives u data on cat5 and a seperate 12v @ 1A dc plug! i’ll test it on a RB tomorrow but i can say that it powers my WRAP boards great! and each of them draw 5-8watts as told by the switch.
EACH of these wrap’s is running 2 400mw Radio’s so i think the 15 watt RB + Radio usage projections are off…
overall you CANT beat the poe switch setup on AP’s…i can reboot each AP via the switch…AND i have this 1 SW plugged into a UPS and get around 2 hours backup time!!! on 15 APs with activity! pretty cool.