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On 2024-10-02 22:33, Edward Rawde wrote:"Arie de Muijnck" <noreply@ademu.nl> wrote in message news:nnd$7f138845$4f992b3a@6f6ac280155cacc4...>On 2024-10-02 20:02, Edward Rawde wrote:>"Don Y" <blockedofcourse@foo.invalid> wrote in message news:vdjvmh$3aipj$1@dont-email.me...>On 10/2/2024 8:46 AM, Edward Rawde wrote:>I did PoE with LTC4267 some years ago such that 12V could also be supplied from a wart.>
Fully isolated with a PA1138 transformer.
How did you inform the PD of the fact that it was no longer
dependant on (and controllable by) the PSE? Or, did you forego
in-band reconfiguration and power control?
It wasn't necessary for the fairly specialized product which was configured at install time with power from PoE or wart but not
both.
I seem to recall at least one accidental connection of both with no detrimental effect but it wasn't investigated further.
>
I've seen a problem when the PoE module had a TL431 + optocoupler at it's output as feedback circuit.
A limiting resistor was lacking, and +12.3V from a wart turned the TL431 fully on and destroyed the optocoupler.
Subsequent PoE operation then had an open loop and destroyed the supplied circuit.
A seperate smaller schottky and capacitor for just the TLV431 seems to work fine in the LTC4267 simulation I just did and works
around wall wart power getting connected to the TLV431.
>
To disconnect wart power when PoE is operating, put a low power voltage doubler on the transformer secondary and use the 24V to
swich off a p-fet in series with wart power.
>>
Arie
>
>
Way too complex. A series resistor between TL431 and optocoupler was all that was needed.
>
Arie
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