lligetfa wrote:The slightly higher price of the MINI should offset the TS 10% failure rate and you cannot put a price on a good night's sleep. I have every bit of faith that the MINI will be a rock solid product.
It's double the price.
lligetfa wrote:The slightly higher price of the MINI should offset the TS 10% failure rate and you cannot put a price on a good night's sleep. I have every bit of faith that the MINI will be a rock solid product.
I did not forget it... that is where the from DC comes in but obviously the DC could come from another source such as solar (regulated).sirhc wrote:lligetfa wrote:I really like the flexibility of powering it either from DC, from another WS, or from a PoE brick. Makes for a great midspan extender too.
Or a barrel connector transformer, do not forgret that option
lligetfa wrote:Oh, and the other great thing is that it can do both 24V and 48V in the same package so you swap 24V/48V kit at any time.
The last time I processed an RMA to Ubiquiti, it cost me more in shipping than it was worth. Then on top of that there was all the handling costs for both the return and the replacement. Our shipping and receiving clerks were unionized so not cheap.rebelwireless wrote:lligetfa wrote:The slightly higher price of the MINI should offset the TS 10% failure rate and you cannot put a price on a good night's sleep. I have every bit of faith that the MINI will be a rock solid product.
It's double the price.
Ubiquiti cannot make up their minds about whether to use 24V or 48V. Take a Rocket for instance... available in 24V and 48V... same thing for UAP and UAP-Pro and UVC/UVC-Pro. Replace a UAP Outdoor with a UAP Outdoor+ and the voltage is different. Then there's the next gen?rebelwireless wrote:lligetfa wrote:Oh, and the other great thing is that it can do both 24V and 48V in the same package so you swap 24V/48V kit at any time.
for wISP service, I totally agree, that's a great feature! But for Unifi deployments, I only need 24v so there are a lot of 'extra' features. I'm deploying in businesses that unifi is good-enough, so that should give an idea of budget and infrastructure. Inexpensive midspans with 24v passive PoE are needed and the list of available products is short.
When Ubiquiti brings out their gen3 cams, it is anybody's guess what voltage they will need.
wayneorack wrote:And at some point Ubiquiti is likely to start supporting the active standards.
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