gmartz 0 Posted February 24, 2015 Hi! I would to verify the following concerns I have in mind: The PoE we're going to use is: ZyXEL GS1900-24HP. Is it okay to connect the NVR to any of the ports of the PoE Switch since it doesn't have any uplink port? (given I switch off the PoE for the said port). The system consists of: 6x 3MP Hikvision Varifocal IP Bullet Camera 4x 2MP Hikvision Varifocal IP Bullet Camera 9x 2MP Hikvision Varifocal IP Dome Camera 1x 32-channel Hikvision NVR 1x Zyxel 24-port Gigabit PoE Switch All devices will be connected to the said PoE Switch. Let me know if I missed something. Thank you in advance! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
abdelm01 0 Posted February 24, 2015 It is fine to plug your NVR into a POE switch, switches "usually" do not give a device power unless it asks for it(a smart switch). So you should not have any issues, if it makes you feel better, just disable the POE in the Web Interface. Also make sure that switch is sized accordingly to the amount of power the cameras will drawl. Not sure what the max wattage that switch is rated to. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gmartz 0 Posted February 25, 2015 It is fine to plug your NVR into a POE switch, switches "usually" do not give a device power unless it asks for it(a smart switch). So you should not have any issues, if it makes you feel better, just disable the POE in the Web Interface. Also make sure that switch is sized accordingly to the amount of power the cameras will drawl. Not sure what the max wattage that switch is rated to. Thank you for the feedback! Yup, I'll just make sure to disable the POE if it doesn't automatically deactivates. Upon double-checking, the IP cameras max power consumption is between 7-8W, while the POE switch has 170W power budget. Computing it, all cameras will consume around 150W in total. So I think it's still safe, right? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Don Stephens 0 Posted February 25, 2015 It is fine to plug your NVR into a POE switch, switches "usually" do not give a device power unless it asks for it(a smart switch). So you should not have any issues, if it makes you feel better, just disable the POE in the Web Interface. Also make sure that switch is sized accordingly to the amount of power the cameras will drawl. Not sure what the max wattage that switch is rated to. Thank you for the feedback! Yup, I'll just make sure to disable the POE if it doesn't automatically deactivates. Upon double-checking, the IP cameras max power consumption is between 7-8W, while the POE switch has 170W power budget. Computing it, all cameras will consume around 150W in total. So I think it's still safe, right? You're safe. If you're worried about frying something because you have 170w but are only using 150w, you don't need to worry. You should obviously have enough power as long as that 170 watts is accurate. I'm guessing the previous post made by abdelm01 was in reference to using a PoE+ switch (or just one with more wattage) if you ended up needing additional power...which you seemingly do not need. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gmartz 0 Posted February 26, 2015 Thank you so much for the replies! Last question, is there a difference if the NVR is connected to an uplink or non-uplink port? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
abdelm01 0 Posted March 2, 2015 It depends. In some switches it will only allow you to pull one camera feed and sometimes it won't let you pull any camera feed unless its a managed switch and you open up 2-way traffic. But i would not put in the UP_LINK port, its really no difference in that nor in a regular port, speed wise. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gmartz 0 Posted March 16, 2015 It depends. In some switches it will only allow you to pull one camera feed and sometimes it won't let you pull any camera feed unless its a managed switch and you open up 2-way traffic. But i would not put in the UP_LINK port, its really no difference in that nor in a regular port, speed wise. Noted. Thanks for the heads up. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites