PoE Cable Distance

Overcoming the Limitations of Copper UTP Cabling to Wi-Fi Access Points

Wi-Fi has become omnipresent with the ever-growing bandwidth demand from smart phones and tablets. Wi-Fi is in office buildings, retail stores, stadiums, airports, hotels, restaurants, hospitals, and schools. Wi-Fi hotspots are deployed by business owners, government entities (municipalities and education), and Service Providers for offloading internet data from cellular networks.

One of the challenges with any access network is the 100 meter distance limitation of UTP cabling. Fiber access networks overcome this distance challenge, but Wi-Fi Access Points typically do not have fiber ports. In addition, many Wi-Fi Access Points are powered using Power over Ethernet (PoE), which provides flexibility in placing and installing devices, but this requires UTP copper cabling.

PoE Cable Distance Wi Fi

The maximum transmission distance of copper UTP cable is 100 meters (328 feet).  The challenge is installing Powered Devices (PD) like PoE Wi-Fi access points more than 100 meters from the Power Sourcing Equipment (PSE).

The maximum transmission distance of fiber optic cable is over 100 kilometers (this varies by data rate and optical equipment). Fiber optic cabling overcomes the distance and bandwidth limitations of UTP, but fiber does not carry electric DC current.

Omnitron PoE Media Converters and PoE Fiber Switches extend network distances via fiber to remote Wi-Fi access points AND provide Power over Ethernet. PoE Extenders connect Wi-Fi devices just beyond 100 meters, when external power is not available, or when using fiber is not an option.

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