Reddit Reddit reviews PoE Texas POE-8-48v60w | 8 Port Passive 10/100 Power Over Ethernet Midspan Injector for IP Cameras, VOIP Phones or Access Points | with 48 Volts, 60 Watts Total Power

We found 20 Reddit comments about PoE Texas POE-8-48v60w | 8 Port Passive 10/100 Power Over Ethernet Midspan Injector for IP Cameras, VOIP Phones or Access Points | with 48 Volts, 60 Watts Total Power. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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PoE Texas POE-8-48v60w | 8 Port Passive 10/100 Power Over Ethernet Midspan Injector for IP Cameras, VOIP Phones or Access Points | with 48 Volts, 60 Watts Total Power
Use to expand your network by adding PoE Power for up to 8 devices at 328 feet away - works with your existing network switch or routerIncludes a 48 volt, 60 watt UL certified power supply and reversing cable for Cisco 7940 and 7960Use to provide PoE power and 10/100 data for eight 802.3af Cameras, WiFi AP's or IP Phones with 60 watts total combined powerPassive Mode B operation (pins +4,5/-7,8) is "always on"For expert technical support from Austin, TX please call 512 479 0317
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20 Reddit comments about PoE Texas POE-8-48v60w | 8 Port Passive 10/100 Power Over Ethernet Midspan Injector for IP Cameras, VOIP Phones or Access Points | with 48 Volts, 60 Watts Total Power:

u/tosuzu · 5 pointsr/HomeNetworking

https://smile.amazon.com/WS-POE-8-48v60w-Passive-Ethernet-Injector-Cameras/dp/B0086SQDMM/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8&qid=1511166939&sr=8-5&keywords=poe+injector

If you have a lot of port to spare why not consider this. Its a 8 port PoE injector that can convert 8 of your port to PoE.

u/dieselfrog · 4 pointsr/homeautomation

Great. Now detail how you built the dashboard - GitHub links are welcomed. :)

I would also recommend this for people that want a cleaner look and can use POE over plain ol' CAT6 in the wall:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0086SQDMM?psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=ox_sc_sfl_title_4&smid=A2SZCFXJT89WME

EDIT: Oops, i meant this link instead: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00AH5XCLC?psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=ox_sc_sfl_title_9&smid=A2SZCFXJT89WME

The other one is one that ended up not using.

u/ragingcomputer · 3 pointsr/homeautomation

I'm a really big fan of Hikvision cameras. They feel really solid for the price and image quality is very good. I'm looking pretty hard at an Amcrest for my next cam. They're getting decent reviews for the price too.

If you do get a Hikvision, look closely at whether the seller is an authorized distributor. I've gotten a grey-market camera and it was ok, but for a few $ more you can also get support and english firmware updates.

For myself, I have one of these in my garage
DS-2CD2332-I-2.8MM

I have one of these on my front porch.
DS-2CD2142FWD-IS-2.8MM

I have one of these powering them both NETGEAR ProSAFE FS108PNA

An unfinished basement and vinyl siding makes mounting exterior cams more tolerable. http://imgur.com/a/qufyW

For setup / testing, I keep one of these around TP-LINK Gigabit PoE Injector TL-PoE150S

I've also installed many more cameras for friends and family.

One 16 cam setup used a dedicated Hikvision DVR unit, DS-7716NI-SP/16-2TB. It has the PoE switch built in. Setup was pretty quick and he's still really happy with it. Runtime on a 1500VA UPS is pretty respectable too.

  • 1x DS-2CD2132F-I-4MM
  • 10x DS-2CD2032-I-4MM
  • 1x DS-2CD2232-I5-4MM
  • 4x DS-2CD2112F-I-2.8MM

    I've got a buddy with 8x DS-2CD2032-I-4MM powered by a Passive 10/100 Power over Ethernet PoE Injector. He's having pretty good luck with that setup.

    At work we install mostly Axis cameras, but we're trying 24 Avigilon cameras for one section of student housing. They seem pretty well built too. This is a mostly positive post, the only cameras I HATE are made by Arecont Vision.

    If you haven't decided on software, I've got an opinion on that too.

    I'm running Milestone XProtect Go on a spare PC. It's free for up to 8 cameras, up to 5 days of retention, no charge for the clients. I am familiar since I manage an XProtect Enterprise install at work, but it can be a pain to set up at first.

    I've also played with Blue Iris and ZoneMinder. I think Blue Iris is the way to go for most folk.
u/ionceheardthat · 2 pointsr/homedefense

Nope! My injector will do 8 ports, but it does have a maximum wattage rating. You likely wouldn't be able to run 8 cisco APs off of the injector I got. This is the exact injector I have: https://smile.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B0086SQDMM/ref=ya_aw_od_pi?ie=UTF8&psc=1

u/ethernaut85 · 2 pointsr/cableporn

The netgear is a JGS524 V2. The small switch is tp-link 8port gigabit switch from Amazon. I can't remember the model but it was a cheap one. The POE injector is from Wi-Fi Texas

WS-POE-8-48v60w Passive 10/100 Power over Ethernet PoE Injector for 8 IP Cameras, VOIP Phones or Access Points, 48 volts, 60 Watts Total Power https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0086SQDMM/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awd_9B.GwbHJ8AHB5

It's running two hikvision cameras fed to a Lenovo TS140 running Ubuntu server with a VM running Blue Iris on Windows 8.1.

u/MaIakai · 2 pointsr/homesecurity

If you don't want to replace the switch you can get a 8 port passive POE injector. They start at $18 without the power brick.

http://www.amazon.com/WS-POE-8-48v60w-Passive-Ethernet-Injector-Cameras/dp/B0086SQDMM/

u/legendtuner · 2 pointsr/homedefense

Technically a POE injector is what is needed. I just wanted to clarify as there are POE injectors and POE splitters.

You can get single injectors but once you start buying a couple they add up.to the same price as this guy and that gives you room to add more cameras down the road

u/manarius5 · 2 pointsr/HomeNetworking

>Do they make unmanaged POE switches? Probably not because (I am assuming) that you would have to turn the power on the specific port that you want.

Yes. here

You could also get a PoE injector.

u/mflagler · 1 pointr/homeautomation

I have three of the DS-2CD2032 bullet cams on my house. They're running 30fps to my Milestone XProtect Go server running on a desktop in my house for recording. Nelly's Security has them, and you can get them on Amazon, but be sure to get the USA models (make sure they say that and not multi-language or Chinese model, as the USA models are hard to find and some sellers say they are USA, but they're really not).

Nelly's Security has the newer model with SD slot (mine are older without it) here: http://www.nellyssecurity.com/cameras/hikvision-2cd2032f-i-outdoor-hd-3mp-ip-bullet-security-camera-4mm.html

They have a 2MP model without SD card that still does full 1080p that's cheaper too: http://www.nellyssecurity.com/cameras/hikvision-2cd2020-i-outdoor-hd-2mp-ip-bullet-security-camera-4mm.html

Just look for the 2CD2xxx models as they are all Hikvision. They have WiFi models as well, but you still need power. The domes aren't as adjustable as the bullet cameras are either (you're restricted on tilting up/down to a certain range, plus they take up more room) The bullet cameras are fully adjustable, and are still outdoor rated IP66.

Nelly's Security is great too. I bought 2 of my cameras through them and when I bricked one doing a firmware downgrade (I don't recommend trying this), I sent it to them, they tried reviving it, and when they couldn't, they just sent me a new camera. Their online chat is very helpful as well.

Edit: If you need a PoE injector, I bought one of these and it's worked perfectly: http://amzn.com/B0086SQDMM

u/Tensoneu · 1 pointr/DataHoarder

This is one of the setups I have configured with BlueIris Software:

7x 4MP POE Outdoor Cameras | 15fps (Around $80-$100/ea. on ebay)

4x 1MP Wireless Foscam IP Cameras (Indoor)| 15fps

1x POE passive Injector [WS-POE-8-48v60w Link

1x 16 port gigabit unmanaged D-Link Switch

1x Alienware Alpa (with an i7-4790T CPU...it's actually overkill). According to Blue Iris it's using around 25% CPU. For your setup you can actually use an i5 or even an i3 1st generation without issues.

1x 6TB WD Purple External Drive via USB3.0


I don't have 24/7 recording, but motion sensing recording. 6 Months of motion sensing recording used up around 1.5TB of storage.


  • I have the recordings save onto the internal SSD (Samsung Pro 850 256GB) of the PC and have BlueIris move the files to the external drive.

  • Indoor cameras gets plugged in when leaving the house for an extended period of time. Because if someone manages to break into the house you'd want a clear shot of the person.


    If space is an issue I recommend splitting up which cameras must have 24/7 recording and the others just motion sensing.



u/xedeon · 1 pointr/centurylink

The two ports on the CALIX ONTs serve different purposes. Only one is for data/internet (ETH 1) the other is for TV service (ETH 2).

https://youtu.be/AyRDtk2uLm0?t=55

Since you're just powering WiFi webcams via micro USB. Just buy a PoE injector like this one and save some $$$. PoE switches are expensive.

POE-8-48v60w | 8 Port Passive 10/100 Power Over Ethernet Midspan Injector for IP Cameras

u/ineedascreenname · 1 pointr/homeautomation

I use this for poe.

WS-POE-8-48v60w Passive 10/100 Power over Ethernet PoE Injector for 8 IP Cameras, VOIP Phones or Access Points, 48 volts, 60 Watts Total Power https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0086SQDMM/ref=cm_sw_r_other_awd_u3x7wb6301J6D

u/sir-draknor · 1 pointr/HomeNetworking

Make sure you know what type of POE you need. Some devices (usually wifi APs) want 24V POE, and others need 802.3af/at (which is 48v). Since you already have a POE switch that is 802.3af/at compliant, I assume your IP cameras are also 802.3af/at compliant, so you should be good.

It's preferably to have one switch rather than two (better performance, less devices / points-of-failure), but it also comes down to preferences & budget. I recently picked up a used Nortel Baystack 5520 for dirt cheap (<$50), which is a datacenter-class 48 port gigabit ethernet switch. But it's also super loud (compared to consumer gear), and pretty power hungry. So - depends on your priorities!

(I'm not using the Nortel as my main networking switch - it's just something I'm using to learn layer 3 networking).

Another option would be a non-POE switch, but then pick up a POE midspan. We used these at work for our POE phones before we switched providers (the new provider leases us Cisco SG200 POE switches instead).

u/djdementia · 1 pointr/networking

If you need ~20 PoE devices (or to plan for it in the future) you might be better off buying a PoE injector hub. This will inject just the power into the cable so you still need a switch.

Most 24 port PoE switches just FYI can't handle 24 ports of PoE in use. Most are designed for maybe 12 ports of PoE in use while the other 12 ports in use but non powered.

http://www.l-com.com/power-over-ethernet-planet-12-and-24-port-8023af-poe-hubs


http://www.amazon.com/WS-POE-8-48v60w-passive-Ethernet-Injector-cameras/dp/B0086SQDMM/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1410988584&sr=8-2&keywords=poe+injectors

u/tashedmesticles · 1 pointr/HomeNetworking

How many POE ports do you need? The Linksys product you linked above has 12. If you are using IP cameras and need a limited number of ports currently, you could save a lot of money by going with a 24-port un/managed switch without POE, and then buying a separate POE injector. One switch I have that I recommend is this one: http://www.amazon.com/TP-LINK-TL-SG2424-Snooping-Web-based-Management/dp/B009LEJL5Q. Then you could buy a separate 8-port POE injector for approx. $40: http://www.amazon.com/WS-POE-8-48v60w-passive-Ethernet-Injector-cameras/dp/B0086SQDMM.

u/apexian · 1 pointr/homedefense

You probably need to take a step back and reconsider what you are hoping to accomplish, and re-calibrate your expectations.

If you simply want to see what kind of wildlife is tipping over your garbage bins, something like a game camera might do the job: http://www.amazon.com/Primos-Trail-Camera-Black-63051/dp/B017WAVIU6

With that said, if you really want a video surveillance system, the first step is determining the bare minimum number of cameras you need. You can always start out with a couple of cameras, and expand your system later.

A $200 budget can probably get you into a one or maybe a two-camera system, if you are resourceful and computer-savvy.

For example:

Camera ($90):
http://www.amazon.com/Hkivison-DS-2CD2335-I-replace-DS-2CD2332-I-security/dp/B0177U7ZK8

PoE injector ($40):
http://www.amazon.com/WS-POE-8-48v60w-Passive-Ethernet-Injector-Cameras/dp/B0086SQDMM

Blue Iris software ($59) or iSpy ($0)
http://blueirissoftware.com/
https://www.ispyconnect.com/

In addition to the above, you'll need an Ethernet switch, Ethernet cables, and a PC to run Blue Iris or iSpy.

There are other camera options out there - this is just one that I have some personal experience with and can recommend. But $70 - $90 is pretty much the low-end when it comes to decent outdoor IP security cameras with low-light capabilities.

u/dc_gov_monkey · 1 pointr/homedefense

The HikVision 3MP cameras are great and have wonderful reviews.

Yes, you will also want to get a PoE switch (or a power injector like this: http://www.amazon.com/WS-POE-8-48v60w-passive-Ethernet-Injector-cameras/dp/B0086SQDMM). This allows the camera to just use a single ethernet cable to provide power and data.

I'm not 100% sure if the Hikvision cameras come with a free DVR software, but a lot of people including myself run BlueIris as their Server. This allows you to use a PC as your DVR. I know there is a bunch of info on their website http://blueirissoftware.com/ and it only costs $49.99 for a full version. Cam-it.org has a lot of discussion on how to use / configure it.

u/37tr3n5k · 1 pointr/HomeNetworking

hoe-lee shit I wish I would have known that. Thanks alot for clarifying that.

So, question then-- this the router I was using. Everything seems to be working fine as of now, however I am only using (2) 4mp 1080p cameras due to my processor only being an i3. I am building a new computer with an i5 processor with 32GB of ram. However, I would sure as hell like to head off another bottleneck issue before it happens. I am using this passive switch and this POE switch. Would you expect problems with the POE switch and just change to a multiport passive POE injector like this one. If you could share your opinion, I would sure be thankful.