• Power Supply: 15.4W (Max. 48VDC) Expands network to areas with no power lines or outlets
  • Ideal for use with access points and IP cameras. Delivers power up to 100 meters (328 feet)
  • System requirements is microsoft windows 98se, nt, 2000, xp, vista or windows 7, mac os, netware, unix or linux and features pwr led Indicator
  • Two Gigabit Ethernet ports for lightning-fast wired speeds
  • Auto-detects the required power supply
  • Plug and Play, no configuration required
  • Expands network to areas with no power lines or outlets
  • Ideal for use with access points and IP cameras
  • Delivers power up to 100 meters (328 feet)
  • Two Gigabit Ethernet ports for lightning-fast wired speeds
  • Auto-detects the required power supply
  • Plug and Play, no configuration required

Fixed the power supply for my 700e outdoor Logitech camera. the Powerline 200 adapter combined with the PoE Injector (TP-Link: TL-POE150S) replaced my non working Logitech camera power supply. You connected the TL-POE150S to your camera with the output going to the Powerline 200 adapter. The Powerline adapter sends the camera signal to your existing computer software. The TL-POE150S is powered with an adapter and the Powerline 200 also plugs in to AC. the configuration is larger than one box but my camera works again. The commander software told me to update the adapter software so i did that and i also had to unplug the new components and then reboot my computer. After that my software found the camera and it is working.

I have several of these PoE injectors and they work well. Not a lot can go wrong, but very reliable.

Super reliable, but I prefer the iCreatin 48V POE Injector, as it has an internal AC adapter. The AC Adapter (aka "wall wart") for the TP-Link injector is almost as big as the injector itself. However, note that the TP-Link does come with an Ethernet cable, while the iCreatin does not.

I read many reviews on different brands of PoE injectors, and I decided to go with this one. This is a great little device that does the job that it was designed to do. I brought 3 of these injectors to power my PoE surveillance cameras around the house. Although this supports gigabit, my cameras and switch are only 10/100, so I can't comment on the speed of that. However, the data transfer rate seems to be pretty consistent. I have had these injectors for a two months now, and I haven't experience any data signal drop or power failure. And of course, they are ON for 24/7; they have been reliable. Depending on the location you put the injector, the unit doesn't feel hot to touch, only warm at most, which is normal. There is really not much more I can say about this injector. If you are looking for a PoE injector to power your surveillance camera, look no further, I would definitely recommend this one. My only complaint is that, the ethernet cable that comes with the injector is only 3 feet long, and it is too short for any of my camera setup location. But then again, for the price, it was still a very good buy. I brought some longer cables on Amazon, no big deal.

These are exactly what I needed to supply power to microphones for my 4 cameras that do not have built in audio (They do have audio in and out connections). I bought microphones (VideoSecu High Sensitive Preamp Mini Audio Pickup Tiny Spy Microphone with Power Bypass for Security Audio Sound Voice Monitoring Recording and bonus Warning Decal WD4) here on Amazon also, and now I have excellent audio listening on all 4 cameras. My PoE (Power over Ethernet) ethernet cable plugs into the TP-Link, which then splits out to a regular data ethernet connector output and a 6/9/12 VDC selectable connector output. The handy included short data ethernet cable connects the output to the camera. The power output connects to the microphone using the included short power cord. The microphone then continues the power out to (power) the camera. Gigabit speed. Nice when it all works the way one expects. (Now will install camera speakers and will be totally set. I am hoping the same TP-Link will be able to also power the speakers.)

These injectors work perfectly for my standard fixed cameras. Just plug them in and the only cable needed is the ethernet cable cat 5 or 6. Greatly simplifies wiring security cameras which are often far from an AC outlet, and these seem to power most static cameras. Pan/Tilt/Zoom cameras require more power to operate, so these inexpensive injectors may not provide enough power for those cameras. Unless you need ramped-up power to operate cameras with extras such as PTZ, these are a great inexpensive solution.

So I've had a Linksys/Cisco SPA 942 VOIP phone for years. Then one day, it wouldn't power on. So I bought another (same) phone and after having it a few years, it too wouldn't power on. I had both phones connected the standard way -- with an ethernet cable cable for data, and a power supply for power. After the second phone died this week, I started researching new phones and found that most VOIP phones don't come standard with a power supply - you need to buy that separately. "Well that's odd", I thought. "How do you power up the phone without a power supply?" So, I did a bit of research and discovered PoE, then determined my existing phone is PoE compatible. All I needed was a way to get power through the ethernet cable. The TP-Link did the trick! Now, both phones power up! I'm guessing something happened to the phone's power supply or the connection in the phone to the power supply. Either way, with the TP-Link, I am bypassing that completely. Now I don't need to get a new phone, and I have a spare phone if this one dies. I'm one happy camper:-)

This TP-Link PoE Splitter pairs well with this adapter: http://amzn.to/2r1WZoV. This combination is great for powering Raspberry Pi or Pine64 boards. I used it with this PoE+ Fanless Switch: http://amzn.to/2qDtOYo. The trio make a great combination for a lab where someone wants to avoid having to play guessing games if the micro-PCs are getting the power they need. This splitter is cheaper than many others but has a maximum output of 15.4w (suggested is <10w). Stock Rpi 3 uses about 2300mw and I was able to boot with this device getting 5000mw from the PoE switch (I could probably tune it down more, but have not tried yet). I love that the device has a selector switch for multiple different voltages. The barrel adapter out is a common standard, so you can find many adapters for different devices if you need to power something different.

I’ve had this adapter running for over a month and It does the job without problems. The combination of Gigabit Ethernet with PoE delivered very economically. PoE simplifies wiring by sending 48V through the LAN cables themselves: great for putting wireless access points or security cameras where AC outlets are not accessible. I used this to power a PoE access point located away from power outlets. The access point had a power budget of 6 watts - only about half the 15.4W this injector can supply. Installation is trivially simple. Plug in the switch-side LAN cable and the device-side LAN cable, then the power brick into an AC outlet and the other end of that into the injector. You are ready to plug in your PoE device at the other end of the device LAN cable. Easy-peasy. I have used PoE before with PoE switches like the Netgear ProSAFE 24-Port Gigabit PoE Smart Switch, the Cisco SG200-26P Gigabit Smart 24 Port PoE Switch and more recently the Buffalo 8 Port PoE GB Switch. If you have a bunch of PoE devices like in a VOIP phone system, get a good PoE switch. If you just need one or two PoE devices this power injector may be a very good solution. For providing a simple but essential function well and being so very easy to install the TP-Link TL-PoE150S has earned 5 stars from me. Hope this helps someone who might find PoE a good solution in an isolated situation.

Works as intended. I use this with the TP-Link AC1200, works great! I did try to use it intially with the TP-Link AC1750 and this did not power the device.