Yeah, that's true... the 110PTP can do 48v.

On Wed, Jun 28, 2017 at 3:20 PM, Josh Luthman <j...@imaginenetworksllc.com>
wrote:

> That and power.  The 110ptp does 24-48 and I think 200 is 24 only.  Both
> do both polarities
>
> Josh Luthman
> Office: 937-552-2340 <(937)%20552-2340>
> Direct: 937-552-2343 <(937)%20552-2343>
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>
> On Jun 28, 2017 4:01 PM, "Mathew Howard" <mhoward...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> The normal Force 110 is probably discontinued, but as far as I know the
>> Force 110 PTP is still being made.
>>
>> The only reason that I'd use a Force 110 PTP instead of a Force 200 would
>> be if I needed to use GPS sync... other than that, the Force 200 is going
>> to be better in pretty much every way.
>>
>> On Wed, Jun 28, 2017 at 2:22 PM, Steve Jones <thatoneguyst...@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> force 180 is the integrated little guy force 200 is the dished one, 110
>>> I believe is DC. I use the 200 all the time for ptp, I love them, even
>>> though they add the latency
>>>
>>> On Wed, Jun 28, 2017 at 2:07 PM, Lewis Bergman <lewis.berg...@gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> I am looking for an inexpensive very low bandwidth replacement for a
>>>> PTP400. I need less than a meg so throughput isn't an issue. I see they are
>>>> both 5,10,20, and 40 MHz channel widths which is good. I can set it on 5MHz
>>>> and get more than what I need and hopefully stay out of everyone else's 
>>>> way.
>>>>
>>>> Unless I am looking at the wrong SKU it looks like the 110 is almost
>>>> twice as much. Maybe I am not looking at complete kits or something?
>>>>
>>>> From those that have used them, what do you think?
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>

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