This is more along the lines of noisy FM sites or extended cable length.
Plus a 300+ foot cat5e/6, even shielded, is a surge magnet.
I do not like the idea of a multi-port device, especially on the tower.
If it fails, then multiple radios go down.
What I would do is order predetermined lengths of hybrid power+fiber
cables for each radio. It's not about saving money on the cable runs. I
want the power and ethernet loop for every radio to terminate in the
shelter.
On 1/3/2016 12:35 PM, Forrest Christian (List Account) wrote:
At a recent show I spent some time asking people about doing this very
product...
That is, a DC powered fiber to poe injector. Small box at the top,
run power and fiber to it, and a short jumper to the radio. I had
gotten as far as finding the appropriate silicon to do this.
I also asked on this list.
The response I got was underwhelming. Either they had no interest in
this at all or they didn't see any reason why they wouldn't just put
a small netonix in a box at the top and then only run a single fiber.
After asking a lot of potential costumers and I don't think getting a
single positive feedback I abandoned the idea, although I still think
it's an excellent idea.
On Jan 2, 2016 9:33 PM, "George Skorup" <geo...@cbcast.com
<mailto:geo...@cbcast.com>> wrote:
>
> No, I mean a single-port media converter and a PoE injector in a box
that goes on the tower next to the radio. A 2-3 foot cat5 out to the
radio's POE+data port.
>
> Fiber + power coming from the shelter. A DC input block. An SFP or
even a fixed optical interface would be fine. 24-48VDC powers this box
and also sends POE out of the RJ45 port w/ jumpers to select pair
polarity like a GIGE-APC-POE. Kinda parasitic power like Forrest's
SyncPipe Parasitic's.
>
> I'm thinking it would also be pretty cool not only for stuff like
the AF24, but think about 450 or 450i APs too. If it could also pass
sync-over-power, you'd have a very usable product. I know at one point
Forrest was talking about doing a SyncInjector module that only put
out power+sync, no ethernet. The idea was to feed it into your
GIGE-APC-POE cards.
>
> Most of the -48 licensed stuff already has DC + fiber input, so this
wouldn't be for that. I guess it would work for radios like the Exalt
ExtendAir G2 which is copper PoE only, and either secondary copper
GigE or special order T1/E1, but the main port is 802.3at POE.
>
>
> On 1/2/2016 10:11 PM, Chuck McCown wrote:
>>
>> No, that is a different project.
>>
>> So you want to inject POE into an ethernet circuit? Both of my POE
surge suppressors will do that.
>>
>> From: George Skorup
>> Sent: Saturday, January 02, 2016 9:07 PM
>> To: af@afmug.com <mailto:af@afmug.com>
>> Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT - bad dream
>>
>> Is that the media converter thing you were talking about?
>>
>> Can you make something like that in reverse? Say I have a hybrid
power+fiber cable up the tower and I want to power up a 20-56VDC
radio. The most common thing I'm thinking of here is an AF24, because
UBNT decided not to put an SFP and a DC input block on the damn
things. For one or two radios, at different heights I might add,
throwing something like a Netonix switch up there doesn't make sense.
Plus they're PTPs that I want to go straight into physical router
interfaces. The media converter should also pass through the link
status in both directions. I have some cheap-o Startech media
converters that don't do that, even though there's a dip switch for
it, but it doesn't work, and it pisses me off.
>>
>> On 1/2/2016 9:45 PM, Chuck McCown wrote:
>>>
>>> It is my APC-POE surge suppressor combined with a 48 to 12 VDC
buck converter. Right now it is a kludge. If it powers up the 844E
OK under max load while being powered from a netonix switch I will
combine the two circuits onto a board and look for an appropriate case
for it.
>>>
>>> From: Chris Fabien
>>> Sent: Saturday, January 02, 2016 7:30 PM
>>> To: af@afmug.com <mailto:af@afmug.com>
>>> Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT - bad dream
>>>
>>>
>>> Can you share more ingo on this chuck? The poe adapter.
>>>
>>> On Jan 1, 2016 4:26 PM, "Chuck McCown" <ch...@wbmfg.com
<mailto:ch...@wbmfg.com>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Yep, I am building a POE adapter for the gigacenter too...
>>>> Love their flow software.
>>>>
>>>> From: Sean Heskett
>>>> Sent: Friday, January 01, 2016 2:24 PM
>>>> To: af@afmug.com <mailto:af@afmug.com>
>>>> Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT - bad dream
>>>>
>>>> Calix can do all that and a whole lot more sterling
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Friday, January 1, 2016, Sterling Jacobson
<sterl...@avative.net <mailto:sterl...@avative.net>> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> I hear you.
>>>>>
>>>>> My new year's goal is to find a better solution for my customers.
>>>>>
>>>>> Unfortunately, at 100-1000Mbps, the pickings are still slim.
>>>>>
>>>>> I would like to use MikroTik and manage the routing, but I'm
finding that it's still best to get a really nice $100-$300+ single
Wireless AC router and place it in the center of the house.
>>>>>
>>>>> What I would really like is a good split solution with routing
in the head/basement, and wireless AC in bridge mode in one or two
places in the house.
>>>>>
>>>>> But that doesn't seem to exist.
>>>>>
>>>>> -----Original Message-----
>>>>> From: Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com
<mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com>] On Behalf Of Ken Hohhof
>>>>> Sent: Friday, January 1, 2016 10:30 AM
>>>>> To: af@afmug.com <mailto:af@afmug.com>
>>>>> Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT - bad dream
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm seeing a gradual increase in customers leasing a managed
Mikrotik from us, we charge $5/mo for a RB951G-2HnD which has been
very trouble free for us once we tweak a couple WiFi parameters. I
think they look at the pile of discarded routers in their closet and
decide to let someone else deal with it. Most still fall into either
the "I can buy one at Walmart for $50" camp or the "I like going to
Best Buy and letting the sales guy talk me into the
>>>>> $250 router because I like shopping for expensive toys" camp.
And people still look at the humble little white Mikrotik in its plain
brown box and think it can't possibly match their big black AC1900
router that looks like a weapon from Star Wars.
>>>>>
>>>>> The question I guess is whether to join the cable/telco crowd
and supply the WiFi router and manage it for no additional revenue,
and then what to do about the people who still want to put their own
Star Wars router behind it.
>>>>>
>>>>> It is very disappointing that since Belkin bought Linksys they
are now designing their own Linksys branded routers that are far worse
than the Linksys designed E series which certainly had their own
problems. I replaced a customer's Belksys AC1900 router with a
Mikrotik this week and they went from having total dead spots in parts
of their house on both 2.4 and 5 GHz to having full bars and great
performance everywhere including the basement. Their minds were
boggled at this little white box with no external antennas blowing
away the big black monster.
>>>>>
>>>>> Of the household brands, Netgear doesn't seem all that bad,
except their low end WNR2000 has a really high failure rate. I see
people starting to trend toward less known brands like Asus and
TP-Link. But too many of my customers think the electronics store is
"Walmart" and they seem to come back with these Belkin pieces of crap,
I particularly hate the model that only has 1 LED on the whole router
and you have to interpret the color and number of flashes, it's like
figuring out what R2D2 is saying. What's that R2? No link on port 3?
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> -----Original Message-----
>>>>> From: Simon Westlake
>>>>> Sent: Friday, January 01, 2016 11:04 AM
>>>>> To: af@afmug.com <mailto:af@afmug.com>
>>>>> Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT - bad dream
>>>>>
>>>>> I've honestly given up completely on all residential routers,
they seem to be slowly converging on a common denominator which is
that none of them work properly and only last a few months. I had to
replace my router recently, and just got a Mikrotik instead. One of
the guys I work with just replaced his old Linksys with a Mikrotik,
and all of his minor problems went away.
>>>>>
>>>>> I used to think that it was a bad idea to provide managed
routers to end users, but I'm slowly changing my mind after realizing
how many issues are caused by them. There's also a lot you could do to
provide better service to an end user, hypothetically.. let's say you
put in a DD-WRT or Mikrotik router and setup some shaping on the
client side with SFQ.
>>>>> They'd probably see a lot less issues with their Netflix
buffering when their Xbox was downloading a game, or their VoIP
cutting out when they're watching Daredevil in 4K.
>>>>>
>>>>> On 1/1/2016 10:05 AM, Ken Hohhof wrote:
>>>>> > I had a bad dream where all my customers go to Walmart and buy
Belkin
>>>>> > routers. I tried to wake up but I wasn't dreaming.
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!!!!!
>>>>> >
>>>>>
>>>>> --
>>>>> Simon Westlake
>>>>> Skype: Simon_Sonar
>>>>> Email: simon@sonar.software
>>>>> Phone: (702) 447-1247
>>>>> ---------------------------
>>>>> Sonar Software Inc
>>>>> The next generation of ISP billing and OSS https://sonar.software
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>
>