These?sorry for the silly question but what adapter can be used to plug the rb5009 using the 2-pin terminal? are ther any simple dc adpater pluggable to an outlet available?
Well I am more looking for DC adapter or multi-dc outlets if it exists. A multi-dc outlet would allow me to plug it to the UPS easily.These?sorry for the silly question but what adapter can be used to plug the rb5009 using the 2-pin terminal? are ther any simple dc adpater pluggable to an outlet available?
https://www.te.com/usa-en/product-796634-2.html
Thanks for the links this is very helpful! Interresting you're using the CRS328. You're only using to power or also to extend the network ? Is it powering the 4 rb5009? What's the schema.I used this 48V 3A power supply: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07G21P3KD
Coupled with these DC splitters: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07J28SX6Y
The power supply goes into one splitter, which feeds to two more splitters, and each splitter goes to a pair of RB5009's in the rack (two on the left, two on the right).
I also use a CRS328 that provides redundant power to the 5009's, but it means the POE-in port only goes up to 1Gbps instead of 2.5Gbps.
I have gotten 2.5Gbps links to work through Tycon POE-INJ-1000-WT's https://www.tyconsystems.com/poe-inj-1000-wt, which would work with the RB5009's POE-in port.
You can also get those as 4+ ports.
Coupled with these DC splitters:
A multi-dc outlet would allow me to plug it to the UPS easily.
this is true. Though it would let so much ports unused if I used the 24 ports POE? Especially if use the POE-OUT version of the rb5009...A multi-dc outlet would allow me to plug it to the UPS easily.
Taking the PoE path means only the power delivery device needs UPS power.
A nice bonus falls out of this if you were using the fiber port on the 5009 as the LAN core uplink. While you might be tempted to reject this idea since you can't do PoE over fiber, nothing stops you from doing both copper and fiber. Simply set the RSTP priority value for the copper link high (confusingly meaning low-priority) so it's mainly used for power delivery, then set the fiber port's priority to a lower value so it's always the main link while it's up.
In addition to centralizing your power distribution, this scheme means you get backup links between the core and the routers, and best of all, you're likely to wire it in such a way that if the fiber link goes down, the same cause won't take down the copper link, because they're presumably taking different paths.
probably a stupid questio, but what DC output would be more efficient:I can't stand those bricks so picked up a Mean Well DIN power supply (HDR-30-24) and a rack mountable DIN rail (WatchfulEyE DIN Rail).
probably a stupid questio, but what DC output would be more efficient:
For longer power supply wires go for higher voltage.
it's current times wire resistance equals power loss.
DC-DC downconverters tend to have higher conversion losses when voltage difference is higher.
Source of wisdom written above.
DC-DC downconverters tend to have higher conversion losses when voltage difference is higher.
I'd need to see data on that.
well nothing wrong I am just trying to get if possible one supply with failover on another circuit during updates. Though it may be just be easier to use an ATS...Yes, Ubiquiti 24, 48, and 50-55V POE injectors should work just fine, depending on the load you plan to draw.
What's wrong with the provided power supply? You could easily cut the DC plug off if you needed to wire it from the side instead of the front.
The higher voltage supplies are slightly more efficient, like 2% maybe. It really depends on whether you’re using PoE. If so, then you need the 48V. Otherwise I’d just use the 24V. When I run my hEXs on PoE it runs hotter than it does on 12V. With the RB5009s, the one on 48V is only 2-3 deg C hotter... 47C-48C than the one on 24V. You could run 2+ PoE units full blast on the 48V@7.5A, they are 150W max. The non-PoE versions only need 20W max so those mentioned are overkill. I’m using a 30W for that. Also, I’m using 18AWG & 20AWG wires.probably a stupid questio, but what DC output would be more efficient:I can't stand those bricks so picked up a Mean Well DIN power supply (HDR-30-24) and a rack mountable DIN rail (WatchfulEyE DIN Rail).
* 48 VDC, current range ~0-5A, peak 7.5A
* 24 VDC, current range ~0-10A, peak 15A
I think the first one would be more efficient? I have 54 VDC on input and max 150W (or 300W it depends) . Also what cable diameter did you use?