TEG1120P-16-150W  18GE+2SFP Ethernet Switch With 16-Port PoE

18GE+2SFP Ethernet Switch With 16-Port PoE

TEG1120P-16-150W is a gigabit Unmanaged Ethernet PoE switch designed by Tenda. The switch provides 16 gigabit PoE ports, 2 uplink gigabit RJ45 ports and 2 SFP ports. It supports the IEEE 802.3af/at standard and can automatically detect PDs and supply power. The maximum output power of a single port is 30W, and the power of the whole switch is 150W. It supports rack mounting, one-toggle settings, plug and play, and simple networking. It is an ideal choice for SMBs, hotels, schools, and parks with video surveillance and wireless networking requirements.
Network standardsIEEE 802.3/IEEE 802.3u/IEEE 802.3ab/IEEE 802.3x/ IEEE 802.3af/IEEE 802.3at
LED IndicatorPower
Link/Act
PoE MAX
Interfaces(18)1GE RJ45 ports
(2)1GE SFP ports
Transmission mediaRecommended: CAT5/5e UTP or better
Fan quantity1
Dimension440mm*178mm*44mm
Level of protectionPort: 6 KV
Power:6 KV
Forwarding modeStore-and-forward
Switch capacity56Gbps
Packet forwarding rate41.7Mpps
Buffer4Mb
MAC address table8K
PoE budgetSingle port: AF: 15.4W, AT: 30W
Whole device: 230W
Power consumption250W
Input voltage100-240V AC,50 / 60Hz
MountingRack mounting : support
Desktop mounting: support
Wall mounting: support
EnvironmentOperating Temperature: 0℃~45℃
Storage Temperature: -40℃~70℃
Operating Humidity: 10%~90% non-condensing
Storage Humidity: 5%~90% non-condensing
CertificationFCC, CE, RoHS
FuntionsOne-key to change network mode:
1.Standard: All ports can communicate with each other. It can be used as a common non-management PoE switch.
2.Priority: Ports 1 to 8 are high-priority ports, which greatly reduce packet loss and congestion when the network is congested.
3.Extend: The maximum transmission distance of the 9-16 ports of the switch can reach 250 meters, and all ports can communicate with each other.
4.VLAN: Ports 1 to 16 cannot communicate with each other, but can communicate with ports 17, 18, SFP1 (19), and SFP2 (20), which can be used to isolate broadcast storms and DHCP conflicts.