48V DC Output Terminal
Posted: Fri Nov 11, 2016 10:41 pm
The netonix switches are AWESOME, and the DC ones have solved a problem I've been having since I took on the task of managing a wisp.
My frustration was that all the sites were doing battery backup with an APC UPS
- they often don't come back on after a power outage, and usually need a truck roll to just push the button if they don't recover.
- it is extremely innefficient to do the AC-DC-AC-DC conversion in a power outage (120 AC charging battery, Battery converting to AC, then converting to DC for equipment)
I now have a Samlex 24V charger and 2 12V batteries in series, the Netonix alerts me outages, and lasts WAY longer than an APC did with the same batteries during an outage.
So, now my request, a dedicated 48V output terminal, the reason's I've come across this need specifically are:
- Lighting (LED systems are often 48V)
- Cambium PacketFlux Sync Injectors and CMM's
- LTE equipment usually seems to want a 48VDC supply
Yes, I'm able to use the 48V pins on the POE ports (And I actually am), but a dedicated 48V terminal would keep these ports free and still use the AWESOME job that Netonix does taking a varying DC source, and outputting stable 48V and 24V POE.
Might as well do a 24V terminal too if you are doing 48V.
Thanks.
My frustration was that all the sites were doing battery backup with an APC UPS
- they often don't come back on after a power outage, and usually need a truck roll to just push the button if they don't recover.
- it is extremely innefficient to do the AC-DC-AC-DC conversion in a power outage (120 AC charging battery, Battery converting to AC, then converting to DC for equipment)
I now have a Samlex 24V charger and 2 12V batteries in series, the Netonix alerts me outages, and lasts WAY longer than an APC did with the same batteries during an outage.
So, now my request, a dedicated 48V output terminal, the reason's I've come across this need specifically are:
- Lighting (LED systems are often 48V)
- Cambium PacketFlux Sync Injectors and CMM's
- LTE equipment usually seems to want a 48VDC supply
Yes, I'm able to use the 48V pins on the POE ports (And I actually am), but a dedicated 48V terminal would keep these ports free and still use the AWESOME job that Netonix does taking a varying DC source, and outputting stable 48V and 24V POE.
Might as well do a 24V terminal too if you are doing 48V.
Thanks.