Network Switches
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Showing Results for Network Switches
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TP-Link
SKU: EAP615-WALL
TP-Link EAP615-WALL AX1800 Wall Plate Wi-Fi 6 Access Point
- AX1800 dual-band Wi-Fi 6 wall-plate access point
- Flush in-wall mount for offices and conference rooms
- PoE input with passthrough on ETH3 for downstream devices
$89.99 -
TP-Link
SKU: EAP650
TP-Link EAP650 AX3000 Ceiling Mnt Dual-Band Wi-Fi 6
- AX3000 dual-band Wi-Fi 6 ceiling-mount access point
- Standard PoE input — fits existing PoE infrastructure
- WPA3 security and centralized Omada SDN management
$120.99 -
TP-Link
SKU: EAP650-OUTDOOR
TP-Link EAP650-OUTDOOR AX3000 Indoor/Outdoor Dual-Band Wi-Fi 6
- AX3000 dual-band Wi-Fi 6 indoor/outdoor access point — IP67
- 574 Mbps on 2.4 GHz plus 2,402 Mbps on 5 GHz combined
- Sealed against rain, dust, and harsh outdoor environments
$144.99 -
TP-Link
SKU: EAP653
TP-Link EAP653 AX3000 Ceiling Mnt Dual-Band Wi-Fi 6
- AX3000 dual-band Wi-Fi 6 ceiling-mount access point
- 574 Mbps on 2.4 GHz plus 2,402 Mbps on 5 GHz operation
- 30W 802.3at PoE+ powered with central Omada SDN management
$80.99 -
TP-Link
SKU: EAP670
TP-Link EAP670 AX5400 Ceiling Mnt Dual Band Wi-Fi 6
- AX5400 dual-band Wi-Fi 6 ceiling-mount access point
- 5.4 Gbps aggregate — handles 250+ concurrent clients
- 2.5 Gbps RJ45 uplink avoids gigabit backhaul bottleneck
$151.99 -
TP-Link
SKU: EAP723
TP-Link EAP723 Omada BE5000 Ceiling Mnt Dual Wi-Fi7 AP
- Omada BE5000 dual-band Wi-Fi 7 ceiling-mount access point
- 688 Mbps on 2.4 GHz plus 4,324 Mbps on 5 GHz operation
- WPA3 security and Omada SDN centralized management
$90.99 -
TP-Link
SKU: EAP725-WALL
TP-Link EAP725-WALL BE5000 Wall-Plate Dual-Band Wi-Fi 7 Acc
- BE5000 dual-band Wi-Fi 7 wall-plate access point
- Flush 143 x 86 x 40 mm install for low-profile coverage
- WPA3 security with enterprise Omada SDN control
$139.99 -
TP-Link
SKU: EAP775-WALL
TP-Link EAP775-WALL BE11000 Wall Plate Wi-Fi 7 Access Point
- BE11000 tri-band Wi-Fi 7 wall-plate access point
- In-wall mount where ceiling install is impractical
- WPA3 security with central Omada SDN management
$189.99 -
TP-Link
SKU: ER605
TP-Link ER605 Omada Gigabit Multi-WAN VPN Router
- Gigabit multi-WAN VPN router with 5 ports plus USB 2.0
- Supports up to 3 simultaneous WAN connections with failover
- USB accepts LTE dongle for mobile broadband redundancy
$60.99 -
TP-Link
SKU: ER706W
TP-Link ER706W Omada AX3000 Wi-Fi 6 Gigabit VPN Router
- AX3000 Wi-Fi 6 gigabit VPN router with 6 Ethernet ports
- 2,402 Mbps at 5 GHz plus 574 Mbps at 2.4 GHz combined
- SFP fiber port for 10, 100, or 1000 Mbps optical uplink
$130.99 -
TP-Link
SKU: ES205G
TP-Link ES205G Omada 5-Port Gigabit Managed Switch
- 5-port gigabit managed switch — 10 Gbps switching capacity
- All five ports sustain full 1 Gbps without internal congestion
- Centrally managed via Omada SDN platform
$25.99 -
TP-Link
SKU: ES205GP
TP-Link ES205GP Omada 5-Port GB Switch 4 PoE+
- 5-port gigabit managed switch with 4 PoE+ ports — 65W budget
- Powers midspan cameras, APs, and intercoms simultaneously
- Omada SDN management with 30W per port maximum delivery
$55.99 -
TP-Link
SKU: IES210GPP
TP-Link IES210GPP Omada 10-Port Gigabit Industrial Easy Ma
- 10-port gigabit industrial switch — 240W PoE budget
- 6 PoE+ ports at 30W each plus 2 PoE++ ports at 95W combined
- Powers PTZ and thermal cameras without secondary supplies
$339.99 $337.99 Save $2.00 -
TP-Link
SKU: LS1008G
TP-Link LS1008G 8-Port Gigabit Desktop Switch
- 8-port gigabit unmanaged desktop switch — fanless design
- Plug-and-play with ~2W typical power draw for small offices
- Drop-in layer 2 forwarding for SMB camera networks
$18.99 -
TP-Link
SKU: MC100CM
TP-Link MC100CM Fiber Converter Multi-Mode 10/100-100
- 10/100 Mbps RJ45 to multi-mode SC fiber media converter
- Extends Fast Ethernet up to 2 km on multi-mode fiber
- Full-duplex operation for camera and NVR fiber links
$21.99 -
TP-Link
SKU: MC110CS
TP-Link MC110CS Fiber Converter Single-Mode 10/100-100
- 10/100 Mbps RJ45 to single-mode SC fiber media converter
- 20 km range eliminates copper distance constraints
- Drop-in fiber bridge for perimeter and multi-building runs
$21.99
Network Switches
Network switches form the backbone of commercial IP surveillance and access control deployments. Select managed or unmanaged switches based on bandwidth, PoE requirements, segmentation needs, and long-term scalability.
Plan Your Deployment
- PoE budget planning and total wattage capacity
- Managed vs unmanaged configuration needs
- Uplink speed and fiber/SFP requirements
- VLAN segmentation and network security planning
- Rackmount vs wall-mount installation considerations
Network Switches — Engineering-Grade Network Infrastructure for Commercial Deployments
This category covers 209 working models of network switches sourced manufacturer-direct or through channel-direct US distribution. Build the rest of your system around the architectural choices below — compatibility, environmental rating, and lifecycle decisions made here propagate through every downstream component you specify.
What to Look For
Port count and PoE budget come first. An 8-camera install needs at least 9 ports (cameras + uplink), with PoE budget covering the sum of per-camera PoE class. Account for uplink speed: 1 Gbps uplinks bottleneck under heavy video load on switches with 8+ high-resolution cameras. SFP+ or 10 Gbps uplinks remove that bottleneck on growing sites.
Managed versus unmanaged switches affect troubleshooting and VLAN segmentation. Managed switches (HPE Aruba, Cisco, Netgear ProSAFE M-series) support VLANs, link-aggregation, port mirroring, and SNMP monitoring — essential for any deployment over 16 cameras or with mixed traffic. Unmanaged switches work for small isolated camera networks but limit growth and troubleshooting visibility.
Layer 3 capability (routing, VLAN inter-VLAN routing) becomes important when surveillance, access control, and corporate traffic share the same physical network. Surveillance VLAN isolation is now standard practice — segregate camera traffic from corporate Wi-Fi and guest networks to prevent broadcast storms and lateral attack paths. Confirm the switch supports the VLAN count and ACL complexity you need.
Outdoor/industrial deployments need ruggedized switches. ComNet, Antaira, and Moxa make hardened switches rated for -40°C to +75°C, vibration, and waterproof housings. DIN-rail mounting fits standard outdoor enclosures. Standard data-closet switches in outdoor enclosures fail within 1-2 years from condensation and temperature swings; spec the right environment rating up front.
Key Specs in This Category
| Spec | Available Options |
|---|---|
| Resolution | 4MP, Thermal, 8MP, 2MP |
| Connectivity | Wired, WiFi + Wired |
| Power | PoE+, PoE++, PoE, AC/DC, DC |
| Channels | 45-Port |
| Type | Switch, Industrial, Media Converter, Wiegand to OSDP Converter, Power Supply, Cable, Adapter, Router |
| Durability | Indoor, Outdoor |
Top Brands in This Category
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the difference between managed and unmanaged PoE switches?
Unmanaged switches power-on and forward traffic without configuration — simplest deployment but no VLAN, no monitoring, no troubleshooting visibility. Managed switches add VLANs, link-aggregation, port mirroring, SNMP, and remote-management interfaces. For deployments above 16 cameras or those sharing infrastructure with other systems, managed is the right choice; the per-port cost is modest and the operational benefit is large.
How much PoE budget should I size for?
Sum the PoE-class budget of all PoE-powered devices, then add 20-30% headroom for growth. Eight 802.3at cameras at 30W max each is 240W minimum — but a 130W-budget 8-port PoE+ switch can't deliver that. Confirm both per-port budget and total PoE budget; many entry-level switches advertise PoE+ ports but cap aggregate budget at half the per-port maximum.
Do I need 10 Gbps uplinks?
For installations under 32 cameras with mid-resolution streams, 1 Gbps uplinks suffice. Above that, or when you need fast investigative playback for many simultaneous reviewers, 10 Gbps (SFP+) uplinks remove the choke point. NVRs writing to NAS over the network also benefit. SFP+ has become reasonably affordable on managed switches; opt for it on new installs over 16 cameras.
Can I run VoIP and video on the same switch?
Yes — modern managed switches use VLAN segregation to keep VoIP, video, and data traffic separated even on shared physical ports. Use QoS (Quality of Service) to prioritize VoIP for low latency and assign video its own queue. Avoid mixing untagged traffic types on a single switch port without VLAN configuration; broadcast storms and bandwidth competition cause both voice and video quality issues.
What's the right uplink between buildings on a campus?
Single-mode fiber for runs over 100 m, multi-mode for shorter runs (typically up to 550 m on OM3, 300 m on OM4 at 10 Gbps). Bidirectional SFPs (single fiber instead of pair) save fiber count when the run is already deployed. Avoid copper between buildings — ground-potential differences during lightning strikes destroy switch SFP modules even when surge-protected.
Need help choosing? Talk to a Senior Specialist — direct line 877-277-7147 or request a quote.


