Actually MAYBE,
You would have to call Tech Support to confirm, but I think we are
recommending 15vdc.
Incidentally, the issue with heat turns out to affect the RAM on the
unit, and we have made modifications to current and future runs that
allows for variable power.
It is important to note, this is ONLY an issue if you are using PoE.
Kevin
**************************************
Kevin R. Knuth
Business Development Manager
North America
260-424-9690 Regional Office
614-822-5275 Corporate Office
kknuth@karlnet.com
www.karlnet.com
**************************************
-----Original Message-----
From: karlnet-bounces@WISPNotes.com
[mailto:karlnet-bounces@WISPNotes.com] On Behalf Of Charles Chia Sheng
Wu
Sent: Tuesday, September 30, 2003 9:32 PM
To: Norm Young; Karlnet Mailing List
Subject: RE: [Karlnet] KN-200 PoE
actually, no
due to overheating issues, there's now a power supply range to use (and
ONLY
use)
-Charles
-----Original Message-----
From: karlnet-bounces@WISPNotes.com
[mailto:karlnet-bounces@WISPNotes.com]On Behalf Of Norm Young
Sent: Tuesday, September 30, 2003 10:01 PM
To: Karlnet Mailing List
Subject: [Karlnet] KN-200 PoE
I'm trying to power up one of the new KN-200 boards. I'm looking at the
PoE specs in the User Guide, and it appears that you can use any voltage
from 12-48vdc, and any polarity scheme on 4/5, 7/8. So, I thought I'd
go with
roughly 15vdc, 7/8 positive and 4/5 negative. I'm hoping that this is
correct. (If so, it's pretty impressive.)
Norm
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