This is literally the *FIRST* video I’ve seen any mention of Phoronix and Michael’s tireless work, after so many years and years. Thank you for bringing more attention to this critical world resource ! ♥️
And BTW: it very much is surely back feeding 60v out the Ethernet interface but since 802.3u specifies common mode rejection requirements higher than this, it shouldn’t damage any upstream components. But still: it seems more a first-timer JLPCB tinkerer design than an official corporate offering. So bad…
@asdrubale bisanzio -- No, the primary becomes a magnet. Calling the ferrite core a "magnet" is like calling the "keeper" placed across the old "horseshoe magnet" a "magnet" since it _conducts_ magnetism. Essentially, calling a magnetic conductor a magnet is like calling the copper wiring in your wall a "generator" or calling the battery cable in your radio (remember radios?) a "battery" since it _conducts_ power from the battery. Or, like calling the subway train "my job" because it takes you to work. N.B.: This does not apply if you happen to be the motorman!
I think it would be interesting to see the efficiency compared to the original hat when both are plugged into a POE switch instead of a POE+ switch. It sounds like the higher voltage of POE+ is a factor.
"Don't ad-hoc a sentence in the middle of a pre-written sentence"... oh how badly I can relate to that statement. Glad to know I'm not the only one suffering there.
@@chicken_punk_pie True they do have different connotations, but I'm not totally mistaken they are "in true meaning" quite closely related. And an ad-lib can also be "an Ad-Hoc action". E.g. if You, while reading Your script, notice that You have written something totally wrong, then You might try to correct it "Ad-Hoc" by "Ad-Libing". And most "Ad Libs" are intrinsically done "Ad hoc", are they not ? English is (in my opinion) a "curious language" that can be used in all so many different ways while in essence expressing the very same thing. Best regards.
Another quality video, thanks for that. I had big expectations for this new POE hat and am genuinly surprised that the board comes with these really obvious flaws. One would expect that these would pop up during testing.
After watching this, I’m definitely waiting for the next revision. My rack has 4x pi’s. 2 running pihole (doesn’t get hotter than 37c, so no need for a fan) the other 2 run servers so cooling by heatsink is perfect, I really want fans to become more silent. Thx Jeff
Also, the new hat doesn't have a cutout to thread the camera cable through, making PoE webcams a little more difficult. I found it odd that there hasn't been an official case, or third party one that I can find that neatly support the hat and camera.
My Engineer PA-01 tool (combination crimp tool, insulation stripper, wire cutter, etc.) includes a screw cutter for M2, M2.6, M3, M4, M5 screws, and it sees a fair bit of use with my 3D printer and related projects. www.engineertools-jp.com/pa0103 Sometimes I just don't have the right size of screw on hand, or I need a screw in a weird length. Being able to easily cut a screw to length with a simple hand tool is pretty neat 👍 Although even M3 screws require a concerning amount of force to cut with that tool, so I'm not sure I'd like to try cutting M5 screws/bolts with it! 😐 And it doesn't ruin the screw threads, as most tools would! Engineer tools are definitely not a super budget option in this age of Chinese mass-produced tools (and which are often perfectly adequate for the job), but they're not unreasonably expensive either, especially since all of my Engineer tools are high quality :)
Hey Jeff, your PoE+ fan was pretty quiet. I just fitted mine last weekend which sits in an open case. But what I was not expecting was the mosquito sound every 20 seconds then quiet 10-15 seconds and then another 20 seconds of a swarm of mosquitoes - continuously all night long. In the daytime I didn't really notice it but this little chap sits behind a monitor in the bedroom and during the night OMG no sleep that night at all ... So the next day that hat had to be removed :-( Also another gotcha was at the moment there does not seem to be any passthrough GPIO headers for the POE+ hat unlike the old PoE HAT. Due to the POE header is not passthrough. I think all you can do at the moment is to get old POE Long Headers and hack the 4 POE ones down to fit. Btw another great video :-)
yeah, I'm kinda surprised at the whole poe hat controversaries. Making a SMPS is very simple these days, even cheap chinese buck converter boards from aliexpress are 90+ (or at least higher 80s) efficient.
Given the large vin/vout delta It would be interesting to see if the effect of changing the buck converter components could improve the efficiency E.g A) A larger value inductor swapped out B) if the switching frequency can be changed
The idle power consumption is probably due to the planar transformer used. I've seen the idle current double when switching from traditional transformers to those, which would match the findings here. I love planar transformers, but the idle power consumption is a drawback.
Thanks for the heads up. I'm about to rig up something similar, and I've been curious if I should wait for the POE+ hat or just grab POE's. I see now I'll need to figure out my power requirements, and capability of my switch.
5:13 it's not a magnet but core/rod made of magnetic-conductive material in order to receive magnetic field from primary winding and induce voltage in secondary winding.
I was thinking the same things... Since HP (HPE) bought Aruba, they're sticking that label on everything. That's a fairly simple HP Procurve switch, with new vinyl. I have several that have been in continuous use for decades. (one had to be replaced, and one has a bad port.)
Great video! Maybe you could test some of the other brands that make PoE hats for the RPI and make recommendations as to which are good and bad? Also you could do a comparison of the best of the other brands PoE hat vs the official rpi brand PoE hats? It would be interesting to know if third party brand PoE hat is better than Official PoE hat.
My Pi4 (4GB) with RaspiOS Lite, pi-hole, 256GB Intel SATA SSD with the second PoE hat revision (without the mezzanine board) only draws 5.05W, 94.60mA, 53.46V My PoE switch is the EdgeSwitch ES-8-150W PoE+ switch. Thanks for the warning, I was planing on getting the new PoE hat but now I will wait!
Great video, I use a lot of Poe at home, Cisco phones and cctv cameras and back in January I migrated a bunch of services to 4 pi4s and a pi2 this includes homebridge, asterisk and 2 piholes. On my enterprise switch under normal load they pull about 2.2 watts each but when backing up they get closer 5 watts, I don’t have anything plugged in to them except network and the micro sd card. (I don’t need disk performance) since then I have carefully modified the setup using the sd card to boot then creating a mix of sd card ,RAM disk and nfs mounts means backup aren’t needed. The interesting thing is using my Hopi power monitor between the mains and the switch if I keep the Poe power draw for the 4 pi’s under 14w the Poe switch does not seem to draw any more power from the mains compared to no Poe being used. Effectively getting power for free.
You hope a Pi revision could output more USB power so this thing is worthwhile. To quote Eames, "You mustn't be afraid to dream a little bigger, darling." Why not a Pi version that just includes PoE, so all heatsinks and accessories are compatible with it?
I like how you said "oldER af" standard versus the "old af" standard. Smart move. BTW, they effectively came out with a higher clock speed rpi4 via the Debian Bullseye release! 21.11.11
Great video! I always assumed that POE would not be very efficient with power use at either the router or client device, but I"m looking forward to your video about it.
With PoE using a high enough voltage on the cable, things like voltage drop and associated power dissipation can be minimised, so it comes down to the efficiency of the voltage conversion circuit of the power sink/client device. I could see it being theoretically plausible for a PoE switch's bigger, maybe-higher-quality AC-to-DC adapter to have sufficiently improved efficiency compared to the tiny, as-cheap-as-possible power bricks supplied with random consumer devices, that it works out _more_ efficient to use PoE. However I've not run the numbers, nor experimented with it myself, so this is just an idea :)
They don't think much about their users and their products reflect that, ivory tower syndrome. They had a nice official case with swap out side panels yet they flipped the ethernet and USB position on the Pi4 making not only their own but lots of third party cases obsolete and they switched to the awful micro hdmi ports that literally nobody likes.
Having the same layout for like a decade is pretty good already. Sometimes, designs need to be changed in order to improve a device. They switched to dual micro hdmi ports because a lot (i assume. they wouldn't change it for just a dozen buyers) of customers use rpis for digital signage and wanted to drive two monitors at once, and couldn't fit two full-size ports. I personally think this wasn't a great idea, as the rpi is supposed to be an entry-level computer for learning and hobby projects. Businesses that need to drive multiple monitors for signage can afford more expensive options. Unfortunately, if they change back to regular HDMI now, we'll have a *third* layout that's not compatible with neither 1-3 or 4 cases, so we're probably stuck with those shitty ports for a while.
The issue here is lack of competition. The Pi is pretty much a monopoly when it comes to SBC, so there's no incentive to even listen to users. Whatever they do, people will complain, but buy it anyways, defeating the purpose of complaining about it.
Almost 100% of changes that the Pi has gone through were the results of USER REQUEST. “Faster CPU” “More/faster RAM” “Faster USB” “Faster network (gigabit)” “Better/Faster Video out” “4K Video!!!” Well, folks, all these changes required faster chips, and faster chips required PCB lay-out changes.. And some of these layout changes required re-locating traces and chips and ports. Some changes were dictated by physics (signal, current, AC-coupling, DC-coupling, inductive coupling, capacitive coupling, thermal coupling, etc & etc & etc) requirements.. PCB layout can be fiendishly difficult. If the “deaf, ivory-tower snobs” had never listened to users, we would still be rockin’ Raspberry Pi 1A, 256M, 500MHz CPU, USB2, 100Mb network, 800x600 video…..
@@ernestgalvan9037 How long it took for them to let us boot from USB again? People have been requesting that since the first model. Same for having the source code for the GPU.
I have a WaveShare PoE Hat for my Raspberry Pi 4B 8GB RAM model and I find it much better. The WaveShare PoE Hat has a better placement for the fan where it does have a slot to feed through the cable for the camera and also a slot to feed through the cable for display(for screens), It also has a switch to turn on or off the fan, it also has a pass through GPIO where you plug the PoE Hat as normal but at the top of the hat it has GPIO pins on top to connect more things to it. Lastly it also has a USB port on it as well to plug something into it. I also have an extension board for my Pi as well which connects to the audio jack, the 2 micro HDMI ports, and the USB-C port and when it is connected, it gives your Pi the audio jack and USB-C as usual, and you can now use regular HDMI cables to the Pi instead of using the micros and you also get an extra USB port too. I recommend those. If you want I wouldn't mind you reviewing the 2 I mentioned just to get your opinion on it.
Wow, I'm starting to learn about the PoE HATs and now I know that I have to choose an overpowering hat or a normal hat that can fit into a normal build.
To all the folks including Jeff) that are raving about the greatness of Phoronix.. I sure hope some (most?) of you are contributing some goodness and Thanks in the form of a buck or two. ($$). Come on, people, let’s show some greatness ourselves.
Some switch mode isolated DC-DC converters require a minimum load current to maintain regulation stability. This is usually the case with low cost regulators that don’t have an opto-isolated (analogue) feedback and instead they monitor the current through the primary winding during switching to estimate the output voltage.
That minimum load current could easily be 200mA, so at 5V that’d be 1W. One way to guarantee the minimum load is to place a resistor in series with a zener diode. As the unregulated voltage rises above the zener voltage, it starts to conduct with the resistor becoming a shunt load. This is more efficient than just strapping a load resistor across the regulator output since it only conducts when the voltage drifts too high rather than all the time (which would hurt the efficiency figures under normal loads).
@@alexscarbro796 If voltage rise is the issue, a zener load that only draws current above 5.2V might (or might not) stabilize the smps. A more complex solution would use a current sensor to reduce or disable the dummy load as actual current draw approaches the minimum. Anyway a well designed PoE+ circuit should have enough complexity to avoid having a minimum load or wasteful own load.
You can not safely provide DC positive energy from two different sources without connecting the ground (negative) together. Think of it as a voltage difference that provides current. When you connect grounds it ensures the same "voltage difference" is established between the two sources.
Thanks! This is a better explanation than others I have seen, and makes more sense. Intuitively, I know that the cheap non isolated adapter I got to power a pi zero from 24vac would cause blue smoke when connected to a DC power supply, but couldn't quite understand why.
When I first saw the PoE hat I thought the price was too good to be true, and it was lol. It has terrible coil whine when the Pi is off and the threaded spacers it came with weren't long enough so it's really easy to overtighten the board and cause pretty bad flexing but if it's too loose it won't turn on because of the tiny socket header they used
Is the fan managed by the Raspberry GPIO? I use Raspberry with Home Assistant OS (home automation), and I can manage the GPIO from the operating system.
Hi there ...is it possible to still use the GPIO pins as the POE Connector does not show any pins ...only small holes but when plugged into the pi ...can those wholes be plugged with small cables?
If you can can, could you report in future what the frequency of the coil whine is?? Due to restricted frequency range in my hearing: I cannot detect any noise at all. In my case I hear nothing on the first video & some minor crackling when you plug in your USB drives. Thanks
I'm sorry for my poor English. Hi! I am a novice owner of raspberry Pi and your videos are very motivating to develop in this direction! I have a question about the POE hat of the first version. Is it possible to connect to Pi poe hat and ups hat at the same time? Will it work? Thanks!
I've had good luck so far on my OctoPi setup using the GeeekPi POE+ hat powered by a Netgear POE+ switch (GS305EPP). On my OctoPi RPi4 I have the RPi 7" LCD, a Pi camera, and two web cams. I haven't checked the power draws yet, though. (Side note, I went wired ethernet on my OctoPi because the WiFi IP address keeps changing on me for an unknown reason...) Do you have any videos that I haven't discovered yet (or any planned) to test out various POE hats?
If I understood corectly, I can use the PoE hat with a Raspberry Pi 4 Model B? Might be a dumb question, but I never used a RaspberryPi extensively. I'm planning to run DietPi + PiHole. PoE is more convenient, since I could just plug it in my PoE+ switch.
Nope. In fact, if you need to shorten a screw or bolt, *you do it with the nut installed*; that way, when you back the nut off, it cleans up (mostly) any burrs you left by cutting.
@@JeffGeerling Not sure if there is demand for that, but I would love towatch a review about those Blinksticks. Maybe with some examples on how to configure/use them :)
The only actual problem I saw in this video was the screw thing, and maybe the SMT connector... but like you stated, rarely would be an issue. I especially found the USB power test with the hat on to be a weird thing to test for, not that it's bad to test for it, but the way it was framed felt like you were trying to say it was an issue. By the way, I'm sure it was done as a joke, but seeing you saw into that screw still attached drove me insane hahaha.
If people are needing more than 13 watts to power whatever setup they are running may be the raspberry pi is not the best option. After all, you can get other options in the soc space that offer decent power efficiency with more performance and support for more peripherals without needing to kludge a solution together that may or may not run for the long term. At 15-20 watts idle you are already into intel atom microserver space. The other thing to keep in mind is most rackmount switches, especially PoE ones, consume quite a bit of power as well.
@@p-thor I believe the Comware line lives on in HP's FlexFabric line now. Not sure I haven't bought a 57/5900 switch in quite some time. The 29/2500 series switches are all ProCurve/Aruba switches and the 15/19/1800s are OfficeConnect which I believe is ProCurve/Aruba based as well.
It would be better if the regular PoE version was a bit cheaper than this PoE+ version. If I'm ignorant of the efficiency issue I would just see two options for the same price, one providing 2.5 amps and the other supplying 4 amps. Then I would buy the "obviously" better version because it appears more versatile. If the price were different I would be more likely to stop and consider if I actually need the extra power and the associated inefficiency.
I don't recommend it either yet, mine makes that noise as well, and since I have it setup in my bedroom, while it's operating, it makes another hard to hear noise. Not to mention that if you plan on leaving this running 24/7, it will get really hot. They should've put in a bigger fan
Hi Jeff, if you run the new PoE hat but set the switch port to run only AF does it still work and does it still consume more power? If I missed this in your video my apologies.
I feel like POE is kind of not a very robust technology in it's nature. Essentially you're trying to drive a current load through a high-impedence signalling wire. To get around power losses due to the high resistance, we pump up the voltage dramatically? What could go wrong?
That's precisely why high voltage lines are high voltage - due to decreased current flow and lower losses. High impedance may be loosely translated into "high resistance for higher frequencies", and doesn't affect DC current nearly as much. Anyway, I really like your curiosity and critical thinking. You're gonna go far. :)
@@rageagainstthebath Thanks, that's interesting, I never thought of it that way. It makes sense that at higher voltages less current flows but I guess I just don't understand why a DC current encounters less resistance than a high frequency signal. As a hobbyist I also realize it may be beyond me.
7:55 "It get's up to 54 decibels compared to the old fan at 45 decibels. That's a pretty significant difference." Me * sitting right next to my AC blasting at full speed *: "Yeah that's way too loud."
Any updates on this? My goal is to power my pi4 running home assistant with PoE+ maybe with Zigbee USB adapter. Dont know how much power it draws though. Would be nice to not use the power adapter and just keep it clean with my network rack. Its so nice to power up things with PoE+ There might be some better third party fans to replace the Sunon with. Sunon was commonly used in server applications running loud. I think Pi5 are in the making as ive heard. I like your rack setup with all the pis. Mounting solution looks homemade with 3d printer hehe. But i think there are rack mounts in metal for a more clean look. Might implement some low rpm fans as well for cooling
I’m curious as to what hard drives could be used with the PoE+ hat without issue? Also, if it is more a throughput issue regards the Pi usb, then surely this isn’t a problem regards the hat but with the USB ports, and if the hard drives are drawing the right amount then it still would be better than the PoE hat which would be incapable of generating enough wattage even if the hat drives were matched to the usb throughput. 🤷♂️ I’m a bit of a newb so please correct me if I am wrong I some way.
I haven't used PoE miself, but for what I can read on Wikipedia 802.3af and at lack power saving features, and it's a common complaint that there's a 4.5w per port power consumption with 802.3at, so there's not much to do on that front afaik. On the other hand, the rest on the issues on the PoE+ hat are hard to justify after having issues with the previous version, specially with glaring mistakes like the screws that could have easily been fixed. RaspberryPi is not a new company anymore, and I'll expect a bit more quality control, specially since they're now supporting industrial use cases.
Anyone buying a switch today should consider a POE++ or bt standard switch to get lots more power per port. What are your thoughts of the external POE power adapters? I'm thinking of getting something for a Pi4 project and won't have room for the POE hat.
Good Monring Jeff, did you notice a coil whine with the PoE+ modules under normal load? I bought 2 of the older PoE modules and both have a clearly audible coil whine (even without USB devices attached). The PIs were running in the utility room. So it wouldn't bother me, but since the cat likes to lie on the dryer, I decided against it and now I'm forced to use non-official modules. For the purpose of cooling I had to tinker and unfortunately they are too high for 1 rack unit. Therefore it would be nice to know whether the new PoE+ modules are worth buying. Even if they would consume more power. I never checked the power consumption of the cheap no-name module I'm currently using. Greetings Chris
I haven't heard the coil whine except when backfeeding it from USB-C with load. Under normal circumstances I don't hear it at all. I do hear a tiny bit on my original PoE HATs.
I have a Pi4 ( Raspberry Pi 4 Model B Rev 1.2) with a single 5 TB USB3 spinning hard drive. Both are running off a POE hat and the switch shows 5.7-5.9W when idle, and up to 8.something W when actively doing a backup. I do not have a " /sys/devices/platform/rpi-poe-fan@0/power_...." to show that number.
I feel, if you're adding peripherals to your Pi, you can afford having a dedicated power supply too. The only Pis I run on PoE are the one's where I can get away with a single cable to them
@11:46 That sound is the sound of the magnetics (flat plane transformer, most likely) either saturating or starting and stopping. For the hey of it, use a pencil eraser to press down on the transformer's core. That should at least attenuate the sound if not actually extenguish the sound.
Hi Jeff, The command you used to measure the current used doesn’t work for me, folder rpi-poe-power-supply does not exist within /sys/devices/platform/ Do I need to install something? Thanks, Al.
Are you using the latest PoE+ HAT? It doesn't work on the older PoE HAT. You also have to make sure you're completely up to date on your Pi OS install.
I would love to see your thoughts on some of the other PoE hats for Pi. There are two versions of the LoveRPi Power-Over-Ethernet that might be interesting on Amazon.
Jeff, thanks for you videos, especially those on the Raspberry Pi. And, I really appreciate you putting a part of the failed recordings in the end. I always thought, I am the only one to produce such nonsense when recording a video :-)
I was happy when I managed to get a PoE HAT for my Raspberry PI 3. That thing whined worse than my kid having to do chores ! I just abandoned using PoE for a Pi after that. Looks like I will have to wait for longer, and a usb-c power adapter will have to remain in my mini rack for my HASSIO Pi4.
I would actually like to see Raspberry Pi's support a simple power rail connection - even if just a screw. This will provide a lot more options for building clusters.
Hi Jeff! Can you recommend a router, switch, wireless access point combo all in one thing under 50 USD, because I am changing ISPs soon, and want to redesign my home network setup on a dirty cheap budget, under 75 USD, any words of wisdom?
Thanks for this information and a great video. Why do you use USB C when running Raspberry Pi 4 with POE? are you joking us? (I do not use the word kidding)
I have the POE+ hats (4 of them) and they buzz like an angry hornet. Thoroughly vile. Definitely use the Poe hat unless there is no other option… now where did I put those aspirins….
i know this isn't relevant but i was wondering if you used the argon one m.2 case and a m.2 to pci express adapter to plug a graphics card in and dowload the drivers if you ran windows 10 on the pi
This is literally the *FIRST* video I’ve seen any mention of Phoronix and Michael’s tireless work, after so many years and years. Thank you for bringing more attention to this critical world resource ! ♥️
And BTW: it very much is surely back feeding 60v out the Ethernet interface but since 802.3u specifies common mode rejection requirements higher than this, it shouldn’t damage any upstream components. But still: it seems more a first-timer JLPCB tinkerer design than an official corporate offering. So bad…
@@fiveangle what are the LEDs in USB? ruclips.net/video/XZ08QKAbBoU/видео.html
That's not a magnet on the transformer, that's a ferrite core!🙂
I shall be more careful with my words next time :)
Thanks for saving me the trouble of pointing this out.
I'll now try to get my teeth to stop grating. )
@asdrubale bisanzio -- No, the primary becomes a magnet. Calling the ferrite core a "magnet" is like calling the "keeper" placed across the old "horseshoe magnet" a "magnet" since it _conducts_ magnetism.
Essentially, calling a magnetic conductor a magnet is like calling the copper wiring in your wall a "generator" or calling the battery cable in your radio (remember radios?) a "battery" since it _conducts_ power from the battery.
Or, like calling the subway train "my job" because it takes you to work.
N.B.: This does not apply if you happen to be the motorman!
Pi Foundation: "We'll replace some ICs to improve efficiency"
Efficiency: _nearly 2x worse_
I think it would be interesting to see the efficiency compared to the original hat when both are plugged into a POE switch instead of a POE+ switch. It sounds like the higher voltage of POE+ is a factor.
@@bradley3549 POE AND POE+ use the same nominal 48v.
@@ar-videos 48v would be in spec for Poe, but below spec for Poe+.
@@bradley3549 Higher voltage means fewer Amps and that actually means lower losses on the cable. Something's fishy about the new hat.
The German language has the appropriate word for such cases: verschlimmbessern
A PSU consumes more than the unit it is powering, interesting.
hmmmm
"Don't ad-hoc a sentence in the middle of a pre-written sentence"... oh how badly I can relate to that statement. Glad to know I'm not the only one suffering there.
Ad-lib and ad-hoc are two pretty different things
@@chicken_punk_pie True they do have different connotations, but I'm not totally mistaken they are "in true meaning" quite closely related. And an ad-lib can also be "an Ad-Hoc action". E.g. if You, while reading Your script, notice that You have written something totally wrong, then You might try to correct it "Ad-Hoc" by "Ad-Libing". And most "Ad Libs" are intrinsically done "Ad hoc", are they not ? English is (in my opinion) a "curious language" that can be used in all so many different ways while in essence expressing the very same thing.
Best regards.
Another quality video, thanks for that.
I had big expectations for this new POE hat and am genuinly surprised that the board comes with these really obvious flaws.
One would expect that these would pop up during testing.
It's almost as Raspberry pi foundation doesn't test there products before selling them
After watching this, I’m definitely waiting for the next revision. My rack has 4x pi’s. 2 running pihole (doesn’t get hotter than 37c, so no need for a fan) the other 2 run servers so cooling by heatsink is perfect, I really want fans to become more silent. Thx Jeff
Also, the new hat doesn't have a cutout to thread the camera cable through, making PoE webcams a little more difficult. I found it odd that there hasn't been an official case, or third party one that I can find that neatly support the hat and camera.
Did the Pi Foundation email mention anything about the screw issue?
Not yet. Still trying to figure out what the deal is there...
Otherwise maybe RSJ can start a mail-in screw-shortening service!
@AstroCat Why couldn't you just say grinder.com? Does RUclips block comments that have links in them?
My Engineer PA-01 tool (combination crimp tool, insulation stripper, wire cutter, etc.) includes a screw cutter for M2, M2.6, M3, M4, M5 screws, and it sees a fair bit of use with my 3D printer and related projects.
www.engineertools-jp.com/pa0103
Sometimes I just don't have the right size of screw on hand, or I need a screw in a weird length. Being able to easily cut a screw to length with a simple hand tool is pretty neat 👍
Although even M3 screws require a concerning amount of force to cut with that tool, so I'm not sure I'd like to try cutting M5 screws/bolts with it! 😐
And it doesn't ruin the screw threads, as most tools would!
Engineer tools are definitely not a super budget option in this age of Chinese mass-produced tools (and which are often perfectly adequate for the job), but they're not unreasonably expensive either, especially since all of my Engineer tools are high quality :)
@@G-u-z-i-o Depends on cnannel owner's settings.
@@erkinalp Well... This one does not, apparently. Otherwise you wouldn't see it.
Hey Jeff, your PoE+ fan was pretty quiet. I just fitted mine last weekend which sits in an open case. But what I was not expecting was the mosquito sound every 20 seconds then quiet 10-15 seconds and then another 20 seconds of a swarm of mosquitoes - continuously all night long. In the daytime I didn't really notice it but this little chap sits behind a monitor in the bedroom and during the night OMG no sleep that night at all ... So the next day that hat had to be removed :-(
Also another gotcha was at the moment there does not seem to be any passthrough GPIO headers for the POE+ hat unlike the old PoE HAT. Due to the POE header is not passthrough. I think all you can do at the moment is to get old POE Long Headers and hack the 4 POE ones down to fit.
Btw another great video :-)
I forget where, but I found some commands that adjusted the fan's temp windows so it doesn't do the all or nothing oscillating
Erm, so they went for synchronous rectifier buck converter and ended up with way worse power efficiency?
yeah, I'm kinda surprised at the whole poe hat controversaries. Making a SMPS is very simple these days, even cheap chinese buck converter boards from aliexpress are 90+ (or at least higher 80s) efficient.
Given the large vin/vout delta It would be interesting to see if the effect of changing the buck converter components could improve the efficiency
E.g
A) A larger value inductor swapped out
B) if the switching frequency can be changed
The idle power consumption is probably due to the planar transformer used. I've seen the idle current double when switching from traditional transformers to those, which would match the findings here. I love planar transformers, but the idle power consumption is a drawback.
Thanks for the heads up. I'm about to rig up something similar, and I've been curious if I should wait for the POE+ hat or just grab POE's. I see now I'll need to figure out my power requirements, and capability of my switch.
5:13 it's not a magnet but core/rod made of magnetic-conductive material in order to receive magnetic field from primary winding and induce voltage in secondary winding.
Those aruba switches, and older procurves, are pretty dope and they'll probably run until the end of time.
I was thinking the same things... Since HP (HPE) bought Aruba, they're sticking that label on everything. That's a fairly simple HP Procurve switch, with new vinyl. I have several that have been in continuous use for decades. (one had to be replaced, and one has a bad port.)
Came here after watching a PhotonInduction video, and somehow that makes this "powerdraw issue" seem a bit "less concerning" ;)
If I put 1000A through this board, it would likely glow quite a bit.
Great video! Maybe you could test some of the other brands that make PoE hats for the RPI and make recommendations as to which are good and bad? Also you could do a comparison of the best of the other brands PoE hat vs the official rpi brand PoE hats? It would be interesting to know if third party brand PoE hat is better than Official PoE hat.
I'm seriously confused as to what is going on in the RasPi quality department when it comes to these PoE boards.
My Pi4 (4GB) with RaspiOS Lite, pi-hole, 256GB Intel SATA SSD with the second PoE hat revision (without the mezzanine board) only draws 5.05W, 94.60mA, 53.46V
My PoE switch is the EdgeSwitch ES-8-150W PoE+ switch.
Thanks for the warning, I was planing on getting the new PoE hat but now I will wait!
Great video, I use a lot of Poe at home, Cisco phones and cctv cameras and back in January I migrated a bunch of services to 4 pi4s and a pi2 this includes homebridge, asterisk and 2 piholes. On my enterprise switch under normal load they pull about 2.2 watts each but when backing up they get closer 5 watts, I don’t have anything plugged in to them except network and the micro sd card. (I don’t need disk performance) since then I have carefully modified the setup using the sd card to boot then creating a mix of sd card ,RAM disk and nfs mounts means backup aren’t needed. The interesting thing is using my Hopi power monitor between the mains and the switch if I keep the Poe power draw for the 4 pi’s under 14w the Poe switch does not seem to draw any more power from the mains compared to no Poe being used. Effectively getting power for free.
Great comment that gives me lots of ideas!
You hope a Pi revision could output more USB power so this thing is worthwhile.
To quote Eames, "You mustn't be afraid to dream a little bigger, darling."
Why not a Pi version that just includes PoE, so all heatsinks and accessories are compatible with it?
I like how you said "oldER af" standard versus the "old af" standard. Smart move.
BTW, they effectively came out with a higher clock speed rpi4 via the Debian Bullseye release! 21.11.11
Jeff… your blobs at the end are just hilarious! You crack me every video! Enjoing it! And also thanks to redshirt Jeff for his hard work 😎
Great video! I always assumed that POE would not be very efficient with power use at either the router or client device, but I"m looking forward to your video about it.
With PoE using a high enough voltage on the cable, things like voltage drop and associated power dissipation can be minimised, so it comes down to the efficiency of the voltage conversion circuit of the power sink/client device.
I could see it being theoretically plausible for a PoE switch's bigger, maybe-higher-quality AC-to-DC adapter to have sufficiently improved efficiency compared to the tiny, as-cheap-as-possible power bricks supplied with random consumer devices, that it works out _more_ efficient to use PoE.
However I've not run the numbers, nor experimented with it myself, so this is just an idea :)
The hdd's power noise is reached the coil and it created the sound.
Or a noisy power supply.
They don't think much about their users and their products reflect that, ivory tower syndrome. They had a nice official case with swap out side panels yet they flipped the ethernet and USB position on the Pi4 making not only their own but lots of third party cases obsolete and they switched to the awful micro hdmi ports that literally nobody likes.
Having the same layout for like a decade is pretty good already. Sometimes, designs need to be changed in order to improve a device.
They switched to dual micro hdmi ports because a lot (i assume. they wouldn't change it for just a dozen buyers) of customers use rpis for digital signage and wanted to drive two monitors at once, and couldn't fit two full-size ports. I personally think this wasn't a great idea, as the rpi is supposed to be an entry-level computer for learning and hobby projects. Businesses that need to drive multiple monitors for signage can afford more expensive options.
Unfortunately, if they change back to regular HDMI now, we'll have a *third* layout that's not compatible with neither 1-3 or 4 cases, so we're probably stuck with those shitty ports for a while.
The issue here is lack of competition. The Pi is pretty much a monopoly when it comes to SBC, so there's no incentive to even listen to users. Whatever they do, people will complain, but buy it anyways, defeating the purpose of complaining about it.
Almost 100% of changes that the Pi has gone through were the results of USER REQUEST.
“Faster CPU”
“More/faster RAM”
“Faster USB”
“Faster network (gigabit)”
“Better/Faster Video out”
“4K Video!!!”
Well, folks, all these changes required faster chips, and faster chips required PCB lay-out changes..
And some of these layout changes required re-locating traces and chips and ports.
Some changes were dictated by physics (signal, current, AC-coupling, DC-coupling, inductive coupling, capacitive coupling, thermal coupling, etc & etc & etc) requirements..
PCB layout can be fiendishly difficult.
If the “deaf, ivory-tower snobs” had never listened to users, we would still be rockin’ Raspberry Pi 1A, 256M, 500MHz CPU, USB2, 100Mb network, 800x600 video…..
@@ernestgalvan9037 How long it took for them to let us boot from USB again? People have been requesting that since the first model. Same for having the source code for the GPU.
@@stale2665 ..as for “RPi 1-3 cases”, remember that the LEDs changed location on the RPi3 series, and the SD card slot changed as well…..
0:07 I expected that Red shirt guy would do something like that!
I have a WaveShare PoE Hat for my Raspberry Pi 4B 8GB RAM model and I find it much better. The WaveShare PoE Hat has a better placement for the fan where it does have a slot to feed through the cable for the camera and also a slot to feed through the cable for display(for screens), It also has a switch to turn on or off the fan, it also has a pass through GPIO where you plug the PoE Hat as normal but at the top of the hat it has GPIO pins on top to connect more things to it. Lastly it also has a USB port on it as well to plug something into it. I also have an extension board for my Pi as well which connects to the audio jack, the 2 micro HDMI ports, and the USB-C port and when it is connected, it gives your Pi the audio jack and USB-C as usual, and you can now use regular HDMI cables to the Pi instead of using the micros and you also get an extra USB port too. I recommend those. If you want I wouldn't mind you reviewing the 2 I mentioned just to get your opinion on it.
Wow, I'm starting to learn about the PoE HATs and now I know that I have to choose an overpowering hat or a normal hat that can fit into a normal build.
To all the folks including Jeff) that are raving about the greatness of Phoronix..
I sure hope some (most?) of you are contributing some goodness and Thanks in the form of a buck or two. ($$).
Come on, people, let’s show some greatness ourselves.
The out takes at the end are hilarious. Thanks so much for sharing those with us.
My pleasure!
Some switch mode isolated DC-DC converters require a minimum load current to maintain regulation stability. This is usually the case with low cost regulators that don’t have an opto-isolated (analogue) feedback and instead they monitor the current through the primary winding during switching to estimate the output voltage.
That minimum load current could easily be 200mA, so at 5V that’d be 1W.
One way to guarantee the minimum load is to place a resistor in series with a zener diode. As the unregulated voltage rises above the zener voltage, it starts to conduct with the resistor becoming a shunt load. This is more efficient than just strapping a load resistor across the regulator output since it only conducts when the voltage drifts too high rather than all the time (which would hurt the efficiency figures under normal loads).
@@alexscarbro796 If voltage rise is the issue, a zener load that only draws current above 5.2V might (or might not) stabilize the smps. A more complex solution would use a current sensor to reduce or disable the dummy load as actual current draw approaches the minimum. Anyway a well designed PoE+ circuit should have enough complexity to avoid having a minimum load or wasteful own load.
Mr. Geerling - has Raspberry corrected the faults you noted?
Thanks.
You can not safely provide DC positive energy from two different sources without connecting the ground (negative) together. Think of it as a voltage difference that provides current. When you connect grounds it ensures the same "voltage difference" is established between the two sources.
Thanks! This is a better explanation than others I have seen, and makes more sense. Intuitively, I know that the cheap non isolated adapter I got to power a pi zero from 24vac would cause blue smoke when connected to a DC power supply, but couldn't quite understand why.
When connected to USB-C power, I did not have the Pi plugged into a PoE switch.
When I first saw the PoE hat I thought the price was too good to be true, and it was lol. It has terrible coil whine when the Pi is off and the threaded spacers it came with weren't long enough so it's really easy to overtighten the board and cause pretty bad flexing but if it's too loose it won't turn on because of the tiny socket header they used
Is the fan managed by the Raspberry GPIO? I use Raspberry with Home Assistant OS (home automation), and I can manage the GPIO from the operating system.
Hi there ...is it possible to still use the GPIO pins as the POE Connector does not show any pins ...only small holes but when plugged into the pi ...can those wholes be plugged with small cables?
get a long header exenstion
Great video, thanks for the info. Surprising 'deficiencies' in both designs... I still have the question: where are the root FS's on your cluster?
Nice vid Jeff, very thoughtful and inciteful.
Top notch investigating, Jeff. Well done as always!!
Of course they had to go with an older standard, and couldn't have just jumped to 802.3bt (PoE++).
If you can can, could you report in future what the frequency of the coil whine is?? Due to restricted frequency range in my hearing: I cannot detect any noise at all. In my case I hear nothing on the first video & some minor crackling when you plug in your USB drives.
Thanks
I'm sorry for my poor English.
Hi! I am a novice owner of raspberry Pi and your videos are very motivating to develop in this direction!
I have a question about the POE hat of the first version. Is it possible to connect to Pi poe hat and ups hat at the same time? Will it work? Thanks!
Nice content. But the bloopers at the end are the best :D
I've had good luck so far on my OctoPi setup using the GeeekPi POE+ hat powered by a Netgear POE+ switch (GS305EPP). On my OctoPi RPi4 I have the RPi 7" LCD, a Pi camera, and two web cams. I haven't checked the power draws yet, though. (Side note, I went wired ethernet on my OctoPi because the WiFi IP address keeps changing on me for an unknown reason...)
Do you have any videos that I haven't discovered yet (or any planned) to test out various POE hats?
I just come um with the question, in you shut down the Pi, How you turn it back on in you online power oder PoE?
Sorry being a bit late to the game, as the POE+ hat does not fit into the official case; which case would it fit?
Finally got a pico and a raspberry pi 4! Now to go on my embedded and os development journey!
When the new hat comes out for the Pi 5 wouldna switch that provides 30W per port be enough to power a few / cluster?
If I understood corectly, I can use the PoE hat with a Raspberry Pi 4 Model B? Might be a dumb question, but I never used a RaspberryPi extensively. I'm planning to run DietPi + PiHole. PoE is more convenient, since I could just plug it in my PoE+ switch.
Loved the compilations of errors at the end
Great vid as per usual, always love to hang around for the muck ups at the end haha
Nope. In fact, if you need to shorten a screw or bolt, *you do it with the nut installed*; that way, when you back the nut off, it cleans up (mostly) any burrs you left by cutting.
What are those PCB USB dongles at 3:23?
Great video, as always :)
Those are Blinkstick Nanos, nice little devices for easy status notification LEDs. But a bit expensive.
@@JeffGeerling well no need to ask the same question, thanks for the answer :D
@@JeffGeerling Not sure if there is demand for that, but I would love towatch a review about those Blinksticks. Maybe with some examples on how to configure/use them :)
The only actual problem I saw in this video was the screw thing, and maybe the SMT connector... but like you stated, rarely would be an issue.
I especially found the USB power test with the hat on to be a weird thing to test for, not that it's bad to test for it, but the way it was framed felt like you were trying to say it was an issue.
By the way, I'm sure it was done as a joke, but seeing you saw into that screw still attached drove me insane hahaha.
Can you post a link to the powered USB hub you showed (or recommend) in the video?
This is the one I use from Amazon, with a 2.5A adapter: amzn.to/3iTDd98
The USB Port can Supplemente 1,2A max.
Okay what about the power pins at the GPIO Bar? How much current can they handle?
3:26 What are these programmable USB ws28* LEDs? I mean it's name + linux support? I am looking for notification light over usb for quite long time ;)
Blinkstick Nano: www.blinkstick.com/products/blinkstick-nano
I was literally about to buy this in another tab when I spotted this vid. thank you.
If people are needing more than 13 watts to power whatever setup they are running may be the raspberry pi is not the best option. After all, you can get other options in the soc space that offer decent power efficiency with more performance and support for more peripherals without needing to kludge a solution together that may or may not run for the long term. At 15-20 watts idle you are already into intel atom microserver space. The other thing to keep in mind is most rackmount switches, especially PoE ones, consume quite a bit of power as well.
Hi do you have a video on setting your HP Switch and is that the GUI (web interface ) in this video Thanks
Did you say HP switch? Is Aruba bought by Hewlett Packard?
Yep Aruba is the old ProCurve line of HP switches.
@@brianhunt6943 ah cool i remember th old 3coms being rebranded ton1920 or something like that. Didn't know about aruba. Thanks
@@p-thor I believe the Comware line lives on in HP's FlexFabric line now. Not sure I haven't bought a 57/5900 switch in quite some time. The 29/2500 series switches are all ProCurve/Aruba switches and the 15/19/1800s are OfficeConnect which I believe is ProCurve/Aruba based as well.
Have they fixed the RPIs USB C resistor problem?
It would be better if the regular PoE version was a bit cheaper than this PoE+ version. If I'm ignorant of the efficiency issue I would just see two options for the same price, one providing 2.5 amps and the other supplying 4 amps. Then I would buy the "obviously" better version because it appears more versatile. If the price were different I would be more likely to stop and consider if I actually need the extra power and the associated inefficiency.
I don't recommend it either yet, mine makes that noise as well, and since I have it setup in my bedroom, while it's operating, it makes another hard to hear noise. Not to mention that if you plan on leaving this running 24/7, it will get really hot. They should've put in a bigger fan
Hi Jeff, if you run the new PoE hat but set the switch port to run only AF does it still work and does it still consume more power? If I missed this in your video my apologies.
Video on audio settings and calibration? Ty for content.
Check out ruclips.net/video/Ajsq4H9zu-E/видео.html for a little BTS on audio and video setup.
I feel like POE is kind of not a very robust technology in it's nature. Essentially you're trying to drive a current load through a high-impedence signalling wire. To get around power losses due to the high resistance, we pump up the voltage dramatically? What could go wrong?
That's precisely why high voltage lines are high voltage - due to decreased current flow and lower losses. High impedance may be loosely translated into "high resistance for higher frequencies", and doesn't affect DC current nearly as much. Anyway, I really like your curiosity and critical thinking. You're gonna go far. :)
@@rageagainstthebath Thanks, that's interesting, I never thought of it that way. It makes sense that at higher voltages less current flows but I guess I just don't understand why a DC current encounters less resistance than a high frequency signal. As a hobbyist I also realize it may be beyond me.
7:55 "It get's up to 54 decibels compared to the old fan at 45 decibels. That's a pretty significant difference."
Me * sitting right next to my AC blasting at full speed *: "Yeah that's way too loud."
Haha, it's all relative. I get annoyed by the coil whine from my space heater when it's not active during the winter :D
My daughter complains of coil whine from a Poe pi. She can hear it over the fans in my server rack, which is very loud. I can't hear it.
I stumbled across your channel, I must say it is pretty catchy ^^ nice work !
Does the POE+ block us from using the camera connector?
I use a Knipex bolt cutter for shortening my screws. May require a bit of filing afterwards, but that's minimal.
Any updates on this? My goal is to power my pi4 running home assistant with PoE+ maybe with Zigbee USB adapter. Dont know how much power it draws though. Would be nice to not use the power adapter and just keep it clean with my network rack. Its so nice to power up things with PoE+
There might be some better third party fans to replace the Sunon with. Sunon was commonly used in server applications running loud.
I think Pi5 are in the making as ive heard.
I like your rack setup with all the pis.
Mounting solution looks homemade with 3d printer hehe. But i think there are rack mounts in metal for a more clean look. Might implement some low rpm fans as well for cooling
I’m curious as to what hard drives could be used with the PoE+ hat without issue? Also, if it is more a throughput issue regards the Pi usb, then surely this isn’t a problem regards the hat but with the USB ports, and if the hard drives are drawing the right amount then it still would be better than the PoE hat which would be incapable of generating enough wattage even if the hat drives were matched to the usb throughput. 🤷♂️ I’m a bit of a newb so please correct me if I am wrong I some way.
I haven't used PoE miself, but for what I can read on Wikipedia 802.3af and at lack power saving features, and it's a common complaint that there's a 4.5w per port power consumption with 802.3at, so there's not much to do on that front afaik.
On the other hand, the rest on the issues on the PoE+ hat are hard to justify after having issues with the previous version, specially with glaring mistakes like the screws that could have easily been fixed. RaspberryPi is not a new company anymore, and I'll expect a bit more quality control, specially since they're now supporting industrial use cases.
Anyone buying a switch today should consider a POE++ or bt standard switch to get lots more power per port.
What are your thoughts of the external POE power adapters? I'm thinking of getting something for a Pi4 project and won't have room for the POE hat.
Good Monring Jeff,
did you notice a coil whine with the PoE+ modules under normal load?
I bought 2 of the older PoE modules and both have a clearly audible coil whine (even without USB devices attached).
The PIs were running in the utility room. So it wouldn't bother me, but since the cat likes to lie on the dryer,
I decided against it and now I'm forced to use non-official modules.
For the purpose of cooling I had to tinker and unfortunately they are too high for 1 rack unit.
Therefore it would be nice to know whether the new PoE+ modules are worth buying.
Even if they would consume more power. I never checked the power consumption of the cheap no-name module I'm currently
using.
Greetings Chris
I haven't heard the coil whine except when backfeeding it from USB-C with load. Under normal circumstances I don't hear it at all. I do hear a tiny bit on my original PoE HATs.
Love your videos. Can’t get enough.
I have a Pi4 ( Raspberry Pi 4 Model B Rev 1.2) with a single 5 TB USB3 spinning hard drive. Both are running off a POE hat and the switch shows 5.7-5.9W when idle, and up to 8.something W when actively doing a backup. I do not have a " /sys/devices/platform/rpi-poe-fan@0/power_...." to show that number.
I feel, if you're adding peripherals to your Pi, you can afford having a dedicated power supply too. The only Pis I run on PoE are the one's where I can get away with a single cable to them
What are the alternatives? Are there any 3rd party PoE+ hats worth checking out?
@11:46 That sound is the sound of the magnetics (flat plane transformer, most likely) either saturating or starting and stopping. For the hey of it, use a pencil eraser to press down on the transformer's core. That should at least attenuate the sound if not actually extenguish the sound.
Hi Jeff,
The command you used to measure the current used doesn’t work for me, folder rpi-poe-power-supply does not exist within /sys/devices/platform/
Do I need to install something?
Thanks,
Al.
Are you using the latest PoE+ HAT? It doesn't work on the older PoE HAT. You also have to make sure you're completely up to date on your Pi OS install.
I would love to see your thoughts on some of the other PoE hats for Pi. There are two versions of the LoveRPi Power-Over-Ethernet that might be interesting on Amazon.
Jeff, thanks for you videos, especially those on the Raspberry Pi. And, I really appreciate you putting a part of the failed recordings in the end. I always thought, I am the only one to produce such nonsense when recording a video :-)
I was happy when I managed to get a PoE HAT for my Raspberry PI 3.
That thing whined worse than my kid having to do chores !
I just abandoned using PoE for a Pi after that. Looks like I will have to wait for longer, and a usb-c power adapter will have to remain in my mini rack for my HASSIO Pi4.
I thought Red Shirt Jeff was going to Dremel off that pesky camera port that was in the way.
5:00 'old hat used a wire around a magnet transformer' -- is that right? Not a magnet but (iron) ferrite core?
Ferrite core :)
I'll be more careful with my words in the future.
I would actually like to see Raspberry Pi's support a simple power rail connection - even if just a screw. This will provide a lot more options for building clusters.
Can you not just power it using the 5v pin on the gpio? I know on the v2b it could be done.
I might like to see a Raspberry Pi 4B overclocking guide.
Ask and you shall receive! www.jeffgeerling.com/blog/2020/overclocking-raspberry-pi-compute-module-4 (4 model B is almost identical).
why don't they just add the poe to the main pi board
Nice vid. I would like to see a video that shows how to build a highly available system with Raspberry PIs.
Hi Jeff! Can you recommend a router, switch, wireless access point combo all in one thing under 50 USD, because I am changing ISPs soon, and want to redesign my home network setup on a dirty cheap budget, under 75 USD, any words of wisdom?
You can never go wrong with a tplink. They should be around that price
Level1Techs recommended Engenius for PoE stuff, might be worth a look?
Thanks for this information and a great video. Why do you use USB C when running Raspberry Pi 4 with POE? are you joking us? (I do not use the word kidding)
Is it still possible to use the GPIOs with the hat on?
I have the POE+ hats (4 of them) and they buzz like an angry hornet. Thoroughly vile. Definitely use the Poe hat unless there is no other option… now where did I put those aspirins….
i accidentally skipped to the beginning right after you said "but first" at 0:20, deja vu moment
I come for the info and stay for the post credit outtakes.
i know this isn't relevant but i was wondering if you used the argon one m.2 case and a m.2 to pci express adapter to plug a graphics card in and dowload the drivers if you ran windows 10 on the pi