(no title)
brirec | 9 months ago
This is why you don’t want “fake” Cat6 etc. cable. I’ve seen copper-clad aluminum sold as cat6 cable before, but that shit will break 100% of the time and a broken cable will absolutely catch fire from a standard 802.at switch.
esseph|9 months ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_over_Ethernet#Power_capa...
For Dayjob I power a lot of very expensive not-even-on-the-market-yet radios and other equipment via multiple PoE standards, mixed vendors, 2 pair, 4 pair, etc via POE and we have ran into all kinds of POE problems over the years.
POE fires do happen. Sometimes it's the cable, the connector, sometimes something happened to the cable run. Sometimes the gear melts.
https://www.powerelectronictips.com/halt-and-catch-fire-the-...
throw0101d|9 months ago
It should be noted that there are two standards (of course) for Ethernet cabling, and one (TIA) officially hardcodes distances (e.g., 100m) but the other (ISO) simply specifies the signal-to-noise has to be a certain limits which could allow for longer distances (>100m):
* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kNa_IdfivKs
A specific product that lets you go longer than 100m:
* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZY48KUAZKhM
esseph|9 months ago
---
Non-standard implementations There are more than ten proprietary implementations.[49] The more common ones are discussed below.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_over_Ethernet#Non-standa...