PoE vs PoE+ vs PoE++: Why Cameras and APs Reboot

PoE is one of the best networking conveniences because it removes wall-wart power adapters. It also creates a new failure mode: the switch may not have enough power budget, the port may not support the right standard, or the cable may be bad.

When an AP or camera reboots as radios, infrared lighting, heaters, motors, or USB loads activate, check its negotiated class, the port limit, total switch budget, and installed cable before blaming firmware. This guide is for home and small-office operators with administrative access to a standards-based switch or injector; record the working port configuration and expect a brief endpoint outage during substitutions.

Quick reference: PoE is not just 'has power.' Match device wattage, PoE standard, port limit, total switch budget, and cable quality.

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PoE vs PoE+ vs PoE++: Why Cameras and APs Reboot

Use this card as the simple mental model, then use the article sections below for the operational details.

Start simpleVerify the result
1. 802.3af PoE

Lower-power devices such as basic phones and small cameras.

2. 802.3at PoE+

Many modern APs and cameras.

3. 802.3bt PoE++

Higher-power APs, PTZ cameras, thin clients, and specialty devices.

4. Switch total watts

A switch can have enough ports but not enough total power for all devices.

Each stage links to a native expandable detail panel; the first panel is open by default.

Start Here: The Beginner Foundation

Power over Ethernet carries DC power and Ethernet data over the same balanced twisted-pair channel. The power sourcing equipment, or PSE, is usually a switch or injector; the powered device, or PD, may be a phone, camera, access point, controller, or sensor. In standards-based IEEE PoE, the PSE first detects a valid PD signature and then classifies or negotiates power before applying normal operating power. Passive PoE is a different product behavior that may place voltage on conductors without IEEE detection, so its voltage, pin use, polarity, and device compatibility must never be assumed from the word PoE alone.

The IEEE types define both power at the source and a lower amount guaranteed at the device after allowed cable loss. Type 1, commonly called PoE or associated with 802.3af, supplies up to 15.4 W at the PSE and about 13 W at the PD. Type 2, PoE+ or 802.3at, raises that to 30 W and 25.5 W. IEEE 802.3bt adds Type 3 with up to 60 W at the PSE and 51 W at the PD, and Type 4 with up to 90 W at the PSE and 71.3 W at the PD. Marketing terms such as PoE++ are not precise enough by themselves; verify the IEEE type, class, and guaranteed PD power in both data sheets.

A working design must satisfy the per-port capability, the switch's total PoE budget, and the endpoint's maximum demand at the same time. A switch may have many PoE-capable ports but insufficient watts to run all of them at their highest class. Device draw can rise when an AP enables more radios, a camera turns on infrared lighting or a heater, or a motor moves. Cable length, conductor resistance, pair balance, connector quality, temperature, and bundles affect loss and heat. Plan measured headroom based on the load profile and failure policy rather than treating any single percentage as an IEEE requirement.

The Fast Comparison

StandardCommon labelPower availableUse forWatch for
802.3afPoEUp to 15.4 W at the PSE; 12.95 W at the PDVoIP phones, simple cameras, small sensorsNot enough for many Wi-Fi 6/6E/7 APs or IR/PTZ cameras
802.3atPoE+Up to 30 W at the PSE; 25.5 W at the PDMost modern APs, cameras, and small network devicesTotal switch budget can still run out
802.3bt Type 3PoE++Up to 60 W at the PSE; 51 W at the PDHigh-end APs, PTZ cameras, compact clientsRequires bt-capable switch/injector and suitable cabling
802.3bt Type 4High-power PoE++Up to 90 W at the PSE; 71.3 W at the PDSpecialty endpoints, displays, lighting, higher-power edge devicesListings that claim 100 W may use proprietary behavior

Advanced Notes and Design Boundaries

The wattage label is only the start of a PoE design. Allocation behavior, pair use, LLDP, power-supply redundancy, cable resistance, connector condition, ambient temperature, and the endpoint's peak operating state determine whether power remains stable.

  • Keep source and load numbers distinct: Type 1 is 15.4 W PSE and about 13 W PD, Type 2 is 30 W and 25.5 W, Type 3 reaches 60 W and 51 W, and Type 4 reaches 90 W and 71.3 W. A vendor's proprietary 95 W or 100 W label is not the standardized Type 4 PSE value.
  • Classification reserves power according to the PD and PSE capabilities; optional data-layer negotiation such as LLDP can refine allocation on supporting equipment. Compare requested, allocated, and measured power in switch telemetry instead of equating current draw with class.
  • IEEE 802.3bt Type 3 spans lower and higher classes, and higher-power operation uses both pairsets. Type 3 and Type 4 equipment can use single-signature or dual-signature PD architectures, which affects classification and troubleshooting details.
  • For high-power PoE, inspect DC loop resistance, pair-to-pair resistance unbalance, conductor gauge, connector contact quality, bundle size, and ambient temperature. Passing a basic data test does not establish acceptable power delivery or bundle heating.
  • Define overload behavior before deployment. Managed PSEs may deny a new PD, cap its class, or shed lower-priority ports when the budget or power supply is constrained; UPS runtime and redundant-power configuration can change the available budget during an outage.

Troubleshooting Workflow

Capture the switch's port-power state before reproducing the reboot, then change only one layer: PD features, port, injector, patch lead, or installed channel. Correlating endpoint uptime with PSE detection, class, allocation, draw, and overload events prevents a short known-good cable from being mistaken for a permanent repair.

  1. 1. Record the PD's required IEEE type and class, maximum and typical input power, supported negotiation method, operating voltage details, and high-load features such as radios, heaters, IR, motors, or USB output.
  2. 2. Verify the exact switch or injector port's IEEE type, class support, per-port maximum, total PoE budget, present allocation, power-supply mode, port priority, and any budget reduction on UPS or redundant power.
  3. 3. Read switch detection, classification, LLDP, requested-power, delivered-power, overload, short-circuit, and port-reset logs while reproducing startup and the endpoint's highest-load state.
  4. 4. Substitute a short known-good standards-compliant copper patch cable or a known-good correctly rated injector to separate PD or PSE behavior from the installed channel.
  5. 5. Wire-map and certify the full installed link, then evaluate length, DC resistance and unbalance where supported, connectors, patch cords, conductor material, bundle temperature, and any midspan connections.
  6. 6. Correct the failed layer, rerun cold start and sustained peak-load tests, confirm budget with all expected PDs active, and document measured draw plus deliberate capacity and failure headroom.

Evidence and Acceptance Tests

Evidence status: documentation-backed. TechGeeks reviewed IEEE-aligned Ethernet Alliance material, current cabling guidance, and independent Fluke Networks explanations; no original PSE, PD, cable-loss, or thermal lab was performed for this draft.

  • Record the switch, power-supply, firmware, port, PD, cable route, negotiated class, requested and allocated watts, measured draw, and UTC timestamps.
  • Cold-start the endpoint, enable its highest expected load, and run it with every planned PD active long enough to catch priority shedding or thermal behavior.
  • Accept the design only when the device stays online, the port logs no power denial or overload, allocation remains inside both the port and total budget, and the installed channel passes the required cabling tests.
  • Test the intended UPS or redundant-power failure state because a switch may expose fewer PoE watts after losing one supply.
  • Restore the original port, injector, or cable and confirm service if the candidate change fails any acceptance condition.

Electrical, Privacy, and Recovery Boundaries

  • Do not connect passive or proprietary power to an endpoint unless voltage, polarity, pair use, and product compatibility are explicitly documented; an RJ45 plug does not make the power mode safe.
  • Use listed cable, connectors, pathways, and installation practices suitable for the environment, bundle, and local electrical/fire rules. Escalate damaged, hot, wet, outdoor, or building-to-building runs to a qualified cabling professional.
  • Switch telemetry can identify device models, locations, schedules, camera activity, and outage times. Limit exports to authorized troubleshooting and redact site or client identifiers before sharing.
  • Keep management access independent of the powered endpoint being tested, save the known-good configuration, and pre-stage a compatible injector or power supply when the device is operationally critical.

What This Does Not Mean

  • A PoE++ label does not prove a specific IEEE type, class, guaranteed PD wattage, or compatibility with a proprietary high-power mode.
  • A switch-reported current draw does not prove voltage and power margin at the endpoint after cable loss, nor does it show connector or bundle temperature.
  • A passing Ethernet data test does not prove acceptable DC resistance, pair-to-pair unbalance, contacts, conductor material, or high-power thermal performance.
  • One successful short-cable test can isolate the installed channel, but it does not prove the original switch and endpoint will remain stable when all production PDs reach peak demand.

Real-World Use Cases

  • Add up expected device draw, not only port count. Example: two APs at 18 W each, four cameras at 8 W each, and one door controller at 12 W equals 80 W before headroom.
  • Choose a switch budget with margin. For that 80 W example, a 120 W or larger PoE budget is a more realistic target than an 85 W switch.
  • Leave headroom for startup, IR LEDs at night, radio power changes, future devices, and inaccurate product listings.
  • Use quality copper cabling and avoid copper-clad aluminum for PoE runs.
  • Check LLDP/CDP power negotiation on managed switches when a device requests less power than it needs.

Failure Patterns to Recognize

  • AP reboots when radios go active.
  • Camera works by day but fails when IR LEDs turn on.
  • Switch logs power denied or overload.
  • Long or poor cable run causes voltage drop or link issues.

Common Mistakes

  • Buying an 8-port PoE switch with a tiny total power budget.
  • Mixing passive PoE with standards-based PoE carelessly.
  • Ignoring cable quality and bundle heat.
  • Assuming every port can deliver the maximum at the same time.

Quick Checklist

  • Check device power requirement and whether it is maximum, typical, or idle draw.
  • Check port standard.
  • Calculate startup, worst-case, temperature, redundancy, and growth margin from the actual design instead of applying one universal percentage.
  • Review switch logs for denied power, overload, or class negotiation messages.
  • Test with a shorter known-good cable.
  • Leave documented growth headroom.

Common Questions

Can a higher-power PoE switch damage a lower-power device?

A standards-compliant PSE and PD are designed to detect and negotiate compatible operation, so a Type 3 or Type 4 PSE can normally power a lower-type IEEE PD without forcing its maximum wattage into the device. That assurance does not apply automatically to passive or proprietary powering. Verify that both sides explicitly support IEEE 802.3 PoE and do not connect an unknown passive injector based only on connector shape or a generic PoE label.

Why does a camera work during the day but reboot at night?

Infrared illuminators, heaters, analytics, or motors may raise demand after dark. The port can then exceed its allocated class, expose a marginal total switch budget, or suffer enough cable voltage drop to reset the camera. Correlate switch power logs with the event, force the camera's high-load features during a controlled test, try a short known-good cable, and inspect maximum input requirements rather than the idle wattage shown on a dashboard.

When should I use a PoE injector?

An injector is useful when the existing switch has no PoE, lacks the required type, or has insufficient budget for a small number of devices. Match its IEEE type and class to the PD, ensure its data path supports the required Ethernet rate, and include it in UPS and cable planning. An injector does not repair bad cabling, and a passive injector should not be substituted for standards-based equipment without exact documented compatibility.

How much spare PoE budget should a switch have?

There is no universal percentage in the IEEE standard. Add the maximum documented or measured simultaneous demand, account for classification allocation, startup and feature peaks, cable loss, future devices, power-supply redundancy, and which ports must survive a failure. A planning allowance such as 20 to 30 percent can be reasonable in one small deployment, but validate it against the actual load and the switch's allocation behavior rather than presenting it as a fixed rule.

Useful Gear And Buyer Notes

Affiliate disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, TechGeeks may earn from qualifying purchases. The product links below are buying references, not a requirement to buy a specific brand or seller. Verify compatibility, seller quality, warranty, and current specs before ordering.

Choose a switch or injector only after matching the PD's IEEE type and maximum input, required data rate, port allocation, total budget under supply failure, and management telemetry. A tester used for high-power troubleshooting should report the measurements the installed-cabling standard and failure hypothesis actually require.

Related TechGeeks Reading

References

Last technical review for this Quick Reference draft: July 15, 2026. On publication day, recheck IEEE/Ethernet Alliance references, the exact PD and PSE data sheets, firmware power-allocation behavior, cabling requirements, and applicable installation rules.

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