REVOTECH Gigabit Micro USB PoE Splitter 5V – Features & Prices in Saudi Arabia :
REVOTECH Gigabit Micro USB PoE Splitter 5V 2.4A, IEEE 802.3af Standard 10/100/1000Mbps for Raspberry Pi 3B, Google WiFi, Tablets, Dropcam Power Over Ethernet USB Splitter Adapter (USB0502G Black)
Brand
REVOTECH
Series
USB0502G
Item model number
USB0502G
Item Weight
1.76 ounces
Product Dimensions
10.83 x 1.1 x 0.91 inches
Item Dimensions LxWxH
10.83 x 1.1 x 0.91 inches
Color
5V 2.4A Micro USB
Power Source
Power: Input 48V DC /0.35A, Output 5V/2.4A
Manufacturer
Revotech
ASIN
B08HS5FSFM
Country of Origin
China
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer
No
Date First Available
September 10, 2020
Test video – REVOTECH Gigabit Micro USB PoE Splitter 5V :
Product highlights :
Support international standard IEEE802.3 af(12.5W); POE port support 10/100/1000Mbps data transmission. Transfer Rate: 10/100/1000Mbps, Standard: IEEE 802.3 I, IEEE 802.3 u, IEEE 802.3 x, IEEE 802.3 af.
5V/2.4A power output is using Micro USB, the Micro USB port only for power-charging.
PD support 37V – 57V voltage transmission. Automatically detects power supply from PSE power supply module.
Support the isolation circuit protection, can effectively protect electrical equipment; Support the short circuit, overvoltage protection, 1500V high voltage isolation.
POE splitter can separate the power and data via cable transmission. Proper matching use with POE switch or PSE injector which meet standard IEEE802.3af, provides power and data at the same time for the terminal device does not support PoE so that non-PoE devices can be powered over Ethernet.
➕ What is the price of REVOTECH Gigabit Micro USB PoE Splitter 5V in Saudi Arabia ?
The price of REVOTECH Gigabit Micro USB PoE Splitter 5V in-store is 40 SAR VAT.
➕ When REVOTECH Gigabit Micro USB PoE Splitter 5V was released ?
The release date was September 10, 2020.
➕ What is the price of REVOTECH Gigabit Micro USB PoE Splitter 5V cheap used ?
The price of REVOTECH Gigabit Micro USB PoE Splitter 5V used is 20 SAR VAT.
➕ What are the main characteristics of REVOTECH Gigabit Micro USB PoE Splitter 5V ?
Special specifications :
Support international standard IEEE802.3 af(12.5W); POE port support 10/100/1000Mbps data transmission. Transfer Rate: 10/100/1000Mbps, Standard: IEEE 802.3 I, IEEE 802.3 u, IEEE 802.3 x, IEEE 802.3 af.
➕ Is it interesting to buy this product ?
The best people who can answer you are customers who have already bought and tested this product (See Customer Reviews). This product is rated 4.5 / 5 on Amazon.
➕ Where to buy REVOTECH Gigabit Micro USB PoE Splitter 5V in Saudi Arabia ?
Check the duration of the warranty and also the faults and defects it covers. Is it complete or limited? and What is included in the warranty (parts, repairs or both)?
Shipping :
Is delivery offered? And how long does it take to get delivered (Delivery time)
Proof of purchase :
Does the shop give you an invoice ?
After-sales service :
Do they have an after-sales service to have information about the installation or operation (instructions for use). Also in case of problem, it is the seller who takes charge or you must contact the manufacturer or supplier yourself.
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16 reviews for REVOTECH Gigabit Micro USB PoE Splitter 5V
Rated 5 out of 5
K. K (verified owner)–
Great to power small switch. – I needed a few extra ports upstairs and adding an extra small switch did the trick. I have a poe switch at my router and thought powering the small extra switch through the poe would work great. And it did work great! This splitter provides gigabit Ethernet and 12v to the small switch. This made it so I wouldn’t have to pull a power supply cord across the desk to power the small switch.
Rated 5 out of 5
A. F (verified owner)–
Gigabit speed with 12v. Works great! – This does exactly what it is supposed to do, provides gigabit speed and 12 volts for my WiFi access point. Other reviewers that say this does not support gigabit are wrong. The first thing I did was test my line speed with and without this PoE splitter through a wired connection using iperf3. The speeds both times were identical and near theoretical limits. I then did the same through my WiFi access point and also got the same great results.
Rated 5 out of 5
E. K (verified owner)–
This just works – I have two of these, powered by Trendnet PoE injectors, and they work great.
Rated 4 out of 5
K. B (verified owner)–
Works…sorta. – I’ve used lower power PoE splitters (12v, 1A) without anything connected to the 12v plug and the splitter will show on the switch as a very low power draw – about 0.5 watts. This splitter does not. Evidently it uses the down stream device to draw power, cause the switch to handshake, which then turns on PoE to the port. Well, one of my devices (Netgear R7000 router) doesn’t draw enough power before startup to load the splitter and get the switch to turn on PoE to the port. I was able to trick it on by placing a 330ohm resistor across the 12v power lines. Once the PoE on the port is on, it will stay on just fine but if there is a power outage or disruption the switch won’t restart the PoE on the port without once again tricking it with a resistor. I plan to make an inline adaptor that will keep the resistor as part of the power supply circuit so that the system will restart properly after a power failure. This splitter is just about the only device I was able to find that makes 12v 2A. Once the switch is tricked the device works great. Customer support has been receptive and is working with me to learn how they might be able to fix or improve their device. I’ll update if we get anywhere.
Rated 5 out of 5
A. F (verified owner)–
Gigabit speed with 12v. Works great! – This does exactly what it is supposed to do, provides gigabit speed and 12 volts for my WiFi access point. Other reviewers that say this does not support gigabit are wrong. The first thing I did was test my line speed with and without this PoE splitter through a wired connection using iperf3. The speeds both times were identical and near theoretical limits. I then did the same through my WiFi access point and also got the same great results.
Rated 5 out of 5
G. L (verified owner)–
Power’s a Pi 3B + Touch Display without getting low power warnings – My 5v/2.4a poe splitter ( B07CNKX14C ) had been working for a while, but lately it’s been tripping up my Pi’s low voltage warning perpetually. For the small 7″ touch display, this warning takes up a fairly hefty area of screen real-estate. When I measured that splitter’s voltage into the pi (before the micro-usb splitter that fed the pi and display, as well as after the splitter, I was getting 4.95v @ .2A (direct to pi), and 4.8-4.9v @ .8A when split between the pi/display.
Rated 5 out of 5
K. K (verified owner)–
Great to power small switch. – I needed a few extra ports upstairs and adding an extra small switch did the trick. I have a poe switch at my router and thought powering the small extra switch through the poe would work great. And it did work great! This splitter provides gigabit Ethernet and 12v to the small switch. This made it so I wouldn’t have to pull a power supply cord across the desk to power the small switch.
Rated 5 out of 5
N. J (verified owner)–
So far works as described! powering an outside ptz camera – is able to power my ptz camera with no issues, used with a poe injector at the other end.
Rated 5 out of 5
A. L (verified owner)–
No more “not enough power” errors on my Raspberry PI – Unlike lesser PoE splitters, this one is capable of doing 3A @ 5V instead of the more common 2.4A @ 5V. While that 0.6A difference may not sound like enough, it is enough to cause power issues on Raspberry PI’s and cause them to throttle themselves (run slower).
Rated 3 out of 5
O. I (verified owner)–
Poor quality control – I connected this to my Access Point to deliver power. The power was split off and delivered to the AP but the GigE signal never established link. Returned for replacement to see if it’s just a bad unit or a bad product. It turned out to be a bad unit. The replacement worked properly.
Rated 5 out of 5
G. L (verified owner)–
Power’s a Pi 3B + Touch Display without getting low power warnings – My 5v/2.4a poe splitter ( B07CNKX14C ) had been working for a while, but lately it’s been tripping up my Pi’s low voltage warning perpetually. For the small 7″ touch display, this warning takes up a fairly hefty area of screen real-estate. When I measured that splitter’s voltage into the pi (before the micro-usb splitter that fed the pi and display, as well as after the splitter, I was getting 4.95v @ .2A (direct to pi), and 4.8-4.9v @ .8A when split between the pi/display.
Rated 5 out of 5
N. J (verified owner)–
So far works as described! powering an outside ptz camera – is able to power my ptz camera with no issues, used with a poe injector at the other end.
Rated 4 out of 5
K. B (verified owner)–
Works…sorta. – I’ve used lower power PoE splitters (12v, 1A) without anything connected to the 12v plug and the splitter will show on the switch as a very low power draw – about 0.5 watts. This splitter does not. Evidently it uses the down stream device to draw power, cause the switch to handshake, which then turns on PoE to the port. Well, one of my devices (Netgear R7000 router) doesn’t draw enough power before startup to load the splitter and get the switch to turn on PoE to the port. I was able to trick it on by placing a 330ohm resistor across the 12v power lines. Once the PoE on the port is on, it will stay on just fine but if there is a power outage or disruption the switch won’t restart the PoE on the port without once again tricking it with a resistor. I plan to make an inline adaptor that will keep the resistor as part of the power supply circuit so that the system will restart properly after a power failure. This splitter is just about the only device I was able to find that makes 12v 2A. Once the switch is tricked the device works great. Customer support has been receptive and is working with me to learn how they might be able to fix or improve their device. I’ll update if we get anywhere.
Rated 5 out of 5
E. K (verified owner)–
This just works – I have two of these, powered by Trendnet PoE injectors, and they work great.
Rated 3 out of 5
O. I (verified owner)–
Poor quality control – I connected this to my Access Point to deliver power. The power was split off and delivered to the AP but the GigE signal never established link. Returned for replacement to see if it’s just a bad unit or a bad product. It turned out to be a bad unit. The replacement worked properly.
Rated 5 out of 5
A. L (verified owner)–
No more “not enough power” errors on my Raspberry PI – Unlike lesser PoE splitters, this one is capable of doing 3A @ 5V instead of the more common 2.4A @ 5V. While that 0.6A difference may not sound like enough, it is enough to cause power issues on Raspberry PI’s and cause them to throttle themselves (run slower).
K. K (verified owner) –
Great to power small switch. – I needed a few extra ports upstairs and adding an extra small switch did the trick. I have a poe switch at my router and thought powering the small extra switch through the poe would work great. And it did work great! This splitter provides gigabit Ethernet and 12v to the small switch. This made it so I wouldn’t have to pull a power supply cord across the desk to power the small switch.
A. F (verified owner) –
Gigabit speed with 12v. Works great! – This does exactly what it is supposed to do, provides gigabit speed and 12 volts for my WiFi access point. Other reviewers that say this does not support gigabit are wrong. The first thing I did was test my line speed with and without this PoE splitter through a wired connection using iperf3. The speeds both times were identical and near theoretical limits. I then did the same through my WiFi access point and also got the same great results.
E. K (verified owner) –
This just works – I have two of these, powered by Trendnet PoE injectors, and they work great.
K. B (verified owner) –
Works…sorta. – I’ve used lower power PoE splitters (12v, 1A) without anything connected to the 12v plug and the splitter will show on the switch as a very low power draw – about 0.5 watts. This splitter does not. Evidently it uses the down stream device to draw power, cause the switch to handshake, which then turns on PoE to the port. Well, one of my devices (Netgear R7000 router) doesn’t draw enough power before startup to load the splitter and get the switch to turn on PoE to the port. I was able to trick it on by placing a 330ohm resistor across the 12v power lines. Once the PoE on the port is on, it will stay on just fine but if there is a power outage or disruption the switch won’t restart the PoE on the port without once again tricking it with a resistor. I plan to make an inline adaptor that will keep the resistor as part of the power supply circuit so that the system will restart properly after a power failure. This splitter is just about the only device I was able to find that makes 12v 2A. Once the switch is tricked the device works great. Customer support has been receptive and is working with me to learn how they might be able to fix or improve their device. I’ll update if we get anywhere.
A. F (verified owner) –
Gigabit speed with 12v. Works great! – This does exactly what it is supposed to do, provides gigabit speed and 12 volts for my WiFi access point. Other reviewers that say this does not support gigabit are wrong. The first thing I did was test my line speed with and without this PoE splitter through a wired connection using iperf3. The speeds both times were identical and near theoretical limits. I then did the same through my WiFi access point and also got the same great results.
G. L (verified owner) –
Power’s a Pi 3B + Touch Display without getting low power warnings – My 5v/2.4a poe splitter ( B07CNKX14C ) had been working for a while, but lately it’s been tripping up my Pi’s low voltage warning perpetually. For the small 7″ touch display, this warning takes up a fairly hefty area of screen real-estate. When I measured that splitter’s voltage into the pi (before the micro-usb splitter that fed the pi and display, as well as after the splitter, I was getting 4.95v @ .2A (direct to pi), and 4.8-4.9v @ .8A when split between the pi/display.
K. K (verified owner) –
Great to power small switch. – I needed a few extra ports upstairs and adding an extra small switch did the trick. I have a poe switch at my router and thought powering the small extra switch through the poe would work great. And it did work great! This splitter provides gigabit Ethernet and 12v to the small switch. This made it so I wouldn’t have to pull a power supply cord across the desk to power the small switch.
N. J (verified owner) –
So far works as described! powering an outside ptz camera – is able to power my ptz camera with no issues, used with a poe injector at the other end.
A. L (verified owner) –
No more “not enough power” errors on my Raspberry PI – Unlike lesser PoE splitters, this one is capable of doing 3A @ 5V instead of the more common 2.4A @ 5V. While that 0.6A difference may not sound like enough, it is enough to cause power issues on Raspberry PI’s and cause them to throttle themselves (run slower).
O. I (verified owner) –
Poor quality control – I connected this to my Access Point to deliver power. The power was split off and delivered to the AP but the GigE signal never established link. Returned for replacement to see if it’s just a bad unit or a bad product. It turned out to be a bad unit. The replacement worked properly.
G. L (verified owner) –
Power’s a Pi 3B + Touch Display without getting low power warnings – My 5v/2.4a poe splitter ( B07CNKX14C ) had been working for a while, but lately it’s been tripping up my Pi’s low voltage warning perpetually. For the small 7″ touch display, this warning takes up a fairly hefty area of screen real-estate. When I measured that splitter’s voltage into the pi (before the micro-usb splitter that fed the pi and display, as well as after the splitter, I was getting 4.95v @ .2A (direct to pi), and 4.8-4.9v @ .8A when split between the pi/display.
N. J (verified owner) –
So far works as described! powering an outside ptz camera – is able to power my ptz camera with no issues, used with a poe injector at the other end.
K. B (verified owner) –
Works…sorta. – I’ve used lower power PoE splitters (12v, 1A) without anything connected to the 12v plug and the splitter will show on the switch as a very low power draw – about 0.5 watts. This splitter does not. Evidently it uses the down stream device to draw power, cause the switch to handshake, which then turns on PoE to the port. Well, one of my devices (Netgear R7000 router) doesn’t draw enough power before startup to load the splitter and get the switch to turn on PoE to the port. I was able to trick it on by placing a 330ohm resistor across the 12v power lines. Once the PoE on the port is on, it will stay on just fine but if there is a power outage or disruption the switch won’t restart the PoE on the port without once again tricking it with a resistor. I plan to make an inline adaptor that will keep the resistor as part of the power supply circuit so that the system will restart properly after a power failure. This splitter is just about the only device I was able to find that makes 12v 2A. Once the switch is tricked the device works great. Customer support has been receptive and is working with me to learn how they might be able to fix or improve their device. I’ll update if we get anywhere.
E. K (verified owner) –
This just works – I have two of these, powered by Trendnet PoE injectors, and they work great.
O. I (verified owner) –
Poor quality control – I connected this to my Access Point to deliver power. The power was split off and delivered to the AP but the GigE signal never established link. Returned for replacement to see if it’s just a bad unit or a bad product. It turned out to be a bad unit. The replacement worked properly.
A. L (verified owner) –
No more “not enough power” errors on my Raspberry PI – Unlike lesser PoE splitters, this one is capable of doing 3A @ 5V instead of the more common 2.4A @ 5V. While that 0.6A difference may not sound like enough, it is enough to cause power issues on Raspberry PI’s and cause them to throttle themselves (run slower).