5 Port Outdoor POE Switch/Extender/Booster, 60W 48V 10/100/1000M POE Passthrough Switch Outdoor Ethernet Extender,PoE Repeater
$67.99 Save:$32.00(32%)
Available in stock
Description
Price: $99.99 - $67.99
(as of Aug 15, 2024 08:44:05 UTC – Details)
Product Description
Waterproof POE Extender
Feature
Compatible with IEEE802.3af/at .Extends the range of PoE and 10/100/1000Mbps Ethernet an additional.100 meters extended distance. No additional power supply is required.Automatically detects and protects PoE equipments from being damaged by incorrect installation.10/100/1000Mbps Full-rate network throughout the whole extended.Compact size, hoop-type installation and fixed design.
Application
Use with AP, IP camera, IP phone and other network equipment, Installed in hotels, schools, buildings, villages, etc.
POE in and POE out
POE in and POE out
The POE Passthrough Switch must be connected to a device with poe function.
Ethernet Standard:IEEE 802.3af / IEEE 802.3at / IEEE 802.3bt
Multiple Installation Methods
Small size and light weight,wall munt or installed on the pillar.Meet all your installation needs.
Wide range of applications,Use with AP, IP camera, IP phone and other network equipment,Installed in hotels, Company, factory,schools, buildings, villages, etc.
COMPACT SIZE
Compact size, hoop-type installation and fixed design.
Dimensions:125 x 150 x 36 mm (4.9 x 5.9 x 1.4″)
Weight:232g/0.5lb
RJ45 port supports 10/100/1000 Ethernet connections and Comply with IEEE 802.3at/af Power over.
Supports passive PoE to power the switch.We recommend supplying power with 60W PoE adapters(not included).(If your POE switch has low output power, you will need a POE injector to power the extender. Otherwise it will not work properly).
POE extender:No additional power supply is required plug-and-play simple set up,Extends the range of PoE and Ethernet an additional 100 meters.
Note: You need to use the POE switch output to match this extender, otherwise the extender output will not work.
Automatically detects and protects PoE equipments from being damaged by incorrect installation.
Compact size, Pole Mountable and Weather-proof Case.Please note that there is no power supply.
Customers say
Customers like the quality of the network switch, saying it works great for a few weeks with no issues. They also say it’s simple and easy to install. However, some customers have reported issues with the lighting and durability of the switch. They say the POE port lights up and none of the other ports light up. Customers also differ on power.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Trinity-Hosting.com –
Highly recommended
We deploy this switch for security camera installations. We haven’t had any complaints of a switch going bad yet. If this switch can survive the Florida heat, it’s a rock solid product.
mike ingoglia –
Was pleasantly surprised as to how reliable this unit is.
I was looking for a water resistant network switch for my outdoor Ubiquity cameras. The Ubiquity outdoor switch has been on perpetual backorder, so I started looking for an alternative. I found this one, and figured it’s cheap and as long as it works long enough for the Ubiquity one to come off backorder, I’d be happy and just toss it in the round file cabinet at that time (the trash). Upon receiving it my suspicion of it being “cheap” seemed to be correct. The plastic isn’t the best, the unit is very light, and the protective cover doesn’t snap in with much authority and I figured it would fall off in the first storm. I was happy with the hardware it came with as it provides plenty of flexibility.My plan was to install this on the wood trim on the eve of my house. I installed this just before summer, and live in Phoenix. I thought there was no way this “cheap” switch was going to make the summer, in direct sun for some of the day in as high as 118 degree weather. I also “knew” the cover would blow off in the first monsoon storm. None of this happened! It’s still going strong. Cover on, switch has literally been running 24/7 for several months, without a single packet lossed (my upstream device is a fancy L3 switch and I monitor this). My 4k cameras in total send 68 mb/s 24/7 through this thing. Yeah, it’s a 1gb/s switch, but most consumer gear does not see 68mb/s non-stop 24/7. In addition, I’m pulling 50 watts of POE through this, without issue. My “pro-level” cameras show solid voltage with no sag, ever.I couldn’t be happier with this purchase. It’s exceeded my expectations in a relatively extreme environment, and continues to do so. Yes, I wish they were managed switches, but at the end of the day on a 5 port switch that really is only functioning as a hub, that really doesn’t matter. It’s a nice to have, but not necessary in this application.If this serves your needs, go ahead and buy it. It’s an excellent little product that works exactly as advertised.
BobInteg –
Lasted 2 months
Product worked well first 30 days, then it needed to be rebooted by disconnecting POE Power every other day, finally died 6/5/2024, Installed 5/10/2024.Would not buy anther, product only has a 30 day return or replacement.
W. M-Ali –
Easy to Install
Very Easy to install. No issues.
Joshua Rhine –
Worked for 4 cameras, UniFi
I connected one 2K and three 1080p POE cameras to this thing and its been running great for about 2 weeks! I wasn’t sure if it’d be too much without an injector (as it’s plugged into a UDM which tops out at around 30W on the left-most ports) but with all 4 cameras connected and running it uses a total of 20-25 watts. The device itself seems to use anywhere from 1-5 watts, usually 3. Fairly low power. The screws it can take for mounting are far too small to instill any kind of confidence and don’t work well with other screws. But I used the pole fastener and it fit around a 2×4 in my attic and hasn’t moved since. Works great! I’d just make sure you don’t need to hang it with screws.PS: the ground wire is optional. No issues so far without it. I’m waiting to connect it soon. Seems to work with grounded ethernet cables.
Dade Register –
Best Outdoor PoE-PD switch on the market
If you’re like me (and actually reading this review), then you probably have done some research finding a good PoE-PD switch. What is a PoE-PD switch? A Power-over-Ethernet Powered Device means the switch is powered by the input Ethernet cable. This device does not come with a power supply. It must be powered by the incoming Ethernet PoE port via another switch or a PoE power injector (not included).I just built a new house. The contractor pulled CAT6 wire throughout (I decided CAT6A was too expensive to terminate). In the basement, I have a primary switch (Brocade ICX6610 with PoE) installed in a cabinet along with my router, server, NAS, NVR, etc. The Brocade (Ruckus) switch is protected by large UPS, provides power to my UniFi security cameras, and is rock solid when compared to UniFi’s own networking equipment. I decided not to go full UniFi after their security debacle, as that was obviously human stupidity. I am only using UniFi Protect and refuse to run a UniFi network controller.I looked at every brand for a PoE-PD switch, not just on Amazon. There is no competitor to this device for Outdoor use that I could find except UniFi. For indoor use, the main competition is a NetGear and all the reviews say that the product requires device class detection (I have not personally tested it). The Ultrapoe indoor device is good too and appears to be similar (possibly the same switch in a different case; I did test it). You can see my review on it too.Some of my UniFi cameras are new and others are a little older. This switch appears to deliver power to devices based on their power demand, not their device class. I was able to power two UVC-G4-PRO cameras (12.5W each) with this switch when providing power from the Brocade switch at 30W (802.11at class 4) from a single port. I know UniFi offers a switch that does this too (for more $), but again; I’m not running a UniFi network controller.Taking a chance on this device has been worth it to me. You won’t regret buying this. Feel free to ask me questions in the comments.
Joel A. Mussman –
This switch works!
I tried a couple of POE repeater switches, and you have to watch out. First, make sure the switch lines up with your devices, 24 or 48 volt; this is a 48 volt switch. But the other ones I tried did not relay enough power even with a bigger injector. I only need 17 watts (two 4w cameras and a 9w access point). This switch is doing it fine with a 30w injector. I strongly recommend using an injector, I tried it right off a POE switch but even though I should have been able to get enough power off one port this switch kept cutting out. I don’t know what watts this switch actually draws, so I probably exceeded what the POE switch could provide. Note that it will only draw up to 60w, but I used a lower power injector because I didn’t need all of that and it works fine.