Power Supplies
Showing Results for Power Supplies
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NETGEAR
SKU: APS750W-10000S
NETGEAR APS750W-10000S 750W Power Supply Unit
- Delivers 750W of stable DC power to M4500 series 100GE managed switches.
- Universal 100–240VAC input supports global facility deployment without rewiring.
- Rack-mount form factor integrates directly into standard 19-inch switch enclosures.
$651.71 $400.99 Save $250.72 -
NETGEAR
SKU: APS920W-100NES
NETGEAR APS920W-100NES 920W 100-240VAC Modular PSU
- 920W continuous output supports high-density PoE++ (802.3bt) switch stacks without derating.
- 100–240VAC auto-sensing input removes regional transformer requirements across global sites.
- Modular form factor integrates directly into compatible switch backplanes, reducing cable runs.
$651.71 $400.99 Save $250.72 -
NETGEAR
SKU: EPS130W-100NAS
NETGEAR EPS130W-100NAS 130W External Power Supply
- Adds 130W to scale GS108 to 123W or GS116 to 183W total PoE budget.
- Supports PoE+ (802.3at) up to 30W per port for PTZ cameras and APs.
- Fanless, rack/wall-mountable unit operates silently from 0° to 50°C.
$77.98 $76.99 Save $0.99 -
NETGEAR
SKU: MHPADPT-10000S
NETGEAR MHPADPT-10000S PD 27W Type-C Power Adapter
- Delivers 27W via USB-C to power NETGEAR MHS series switches reliably.
- Industrial-grade operating temp supports non-climate-controlled deployments.
- Wall and ceiling mount options simplify installation in space-constrained cabinets.
$18.97 $17.99 Save $0.98 -
NETGEAR
SKU: PAV12V35-100NAS
NETGEAR PAV12V35-100NAS Power Adapter 12V 3.5A
- Delivers 12V 3.5A DC output to replace failed NETGEAR switch power supplies.
- 100–240V 50/60Hz input supports North American and international grid deployments.
- 1.8 m cord and compact 2.99×2.36×1.38 in body fits tight rack and shelf installs.
$31.18 $30.99 Save $0.19 -
NETGEAR
SKU: PST4310-10000S
NETGEAR PST4310-10000S PSU Tray for M4350-8M2V
- Designed exclusively for the M4350-8M2V 96-port 100G switch — no adapter required.
- Fits standard 19-inch racks; wall and ceiling mount options suit non-standard layouts.
- Plastic airflow-optimized enclosure isolates PSU heat from switch intake vents.
$434.47 $299.99 Save $134.48 -
NETGEAR
SKU: WAX620PA-100NAS
NETGEAR WAX620PA-100NAS WiFi 6 Power Adapter
- Delivers 802.3at PoE+ power (9W–25.5W) to the WAX620 over a single cable run.
- 2.5G Multi-Gig Ethernet port preserves full AX3600 throughput without a separate power drop.
- Requires Cat 6A cabling and a PoE+ switch providing ≥30W per port for reliable operation.
$326.57 $201.99 Save $124.58 -
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Panduit
SKU: MP-ACS-1
Panduit MP-ACS-1 Universal Power Adapter for MP100/MP200
$79.53 $78.99 Save $0.54 -
Pelco
SKU: FM1010
Pelco FM1010 EMC Filter Marine Certified
EMC filter for marine-certified camera power with DNV/Lloyd's/ABS compliance
- Suppresses conducted electromagnetic interference on power feed lines
- DNV, Lloyd's, and ABS marine certification for regulated deployments
- SOLAS and NDAA Section 889 compliant for government/commercial vessels
$50.70 $49.99 Save $0.71 -
Pelco
SKU: IRHPS120
Pelco IRHPS120 120Vac Power Supply for IR Camera Housing
120Vac to 24Vac power supply for IR camera housings, North American only
- 30W regulated 24Vac output powers heater, blower, illuminator, and camera
- 120Vac 50/60Hz input with NDAA Section 889 compliance for regulated deployments
- Indoor installation near camera location with 1-year manufacturer coverage
$131.13 $130.99 Save $0.14 -
Pelco
SKU: IRHPS230
Pelco IRHPS230 Power Supply 230Vac IR Housing
230 Vac power supply for Pelco IR housings in Europe and Asia-Pacific
- Converts 230 Vac 50/60 Hz to 24 Vac at 30 W for simultaneous IR, heat, blower
- Single integrated supply for Pelco IR camera housings with IP66 rated enclosure
- Sized for commercial surveillance in regions outside North America with 230 Vac standard
$131.13 $130.99 Save $0.14 -
Pelco
SKU: KSC-PSKIT
Pelco KSC-PSKIT 12VDC Power Adapter
- Delivers regulated 12VDC for stable power across Pelco cameras and control modules.
- Corner-mount design fits space-constrained enclosures without additional hardware.
- 940nm invisible IR output maintains covert operation in low-light surveillance zones.
$26.71 $25.99 Save $0.72
Power Supplies
Power supplies provide stable and regulated power for surveillance cameras, access control devices, and intercom systems. Selecting the proper voltage, amperage, and redundancy configuration ensures reliable operation and minimizes system downtime in commercial environments.
Plan Your Deployment
- Voltage and amperage requirements for connected devices
- Centralized vs distributed power architecture
- Redundancy and failover considerations
- Indoor vs outdoor installation requirements
- Code compliance and surge protection planning
Power Supplies — Engineering-Grade Power Distribution for Commercial Deployments
This category covers 193 working models of power supplies 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
Voltage and amperage requirements come from the connected load. Cameras and access-control hardware typically use 12VDC or 24VAC; PoE-powered devices need a PoE injector or switch instead of a traditional supply. Sum the steady-state current draw across all devices on the supply, then add 25-30% headroom for inrush and growth. Undersized supplies fail quickly under sustained load.
Linear, switching, and PoE supplies have different efficiency, noise, and form-factor characteristics. Switching supplies are smaller and cooler-running but introduce switching noise that can affect audio circuits. Linear supplies run quieter electrically but generate more heat and weigh more. PoE injectors and switches are standard for IP cameras and access readers — pick by port count, power budget, and management capability.
Output redundancy and battery backup are the distinguishing features at the high end. Multi-output supplies with individually-fused outputs isolate device failures so one shorted camera doesn't take down the rest. Battery-backed supplies maintain operation during AC failure — code-mandated on most access-control and emergency systems. Sizing the battery for actual runtime requirement is more important than headline Ah capacity.
Enclosure type, mounting, and certification matter for code compliance and field reliability. NEMA-rated enclosures for outdoor/wet locations; lockable enclosures for tamper-resistant installs. UL 294 listing for access-control supplies; UL 1481 for fire-alarm supplies. Verify the AHJ's listing requirements before ordering — many jurisdictions reject non-listed supplies in commercial life-safety installs.
Key Specs in This Category
| Spec | Available Options |
|---|---|
| Resolution | 4MP, 2MP, 0MP, 8MP, 5MP, 20MP+ |
| IP Rating | IP65, IP68, IP66, IP67 |
| Connectivity | Wired, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi |
| Power | AC/DC, PoE+, PoE |
| Storage | microSD |
| Type | Power Supply, Accessory, Power Accessories, Switch, Controller, Mobile Computer, Power Adapter, DVR |
Top Brands in This Category
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a battery backup on my power supply?
For access control on egress doors, fire alarm systems, and most security-monitored installations — yes, code requires it. Battery backup runtime is typically 4 hours minimum for access control (24 hours for fire alarm). For surveillance cameras alone, battery backup is optional but recommended; a 30-minute UPS bridge handles most utility-power glitches and prevents reboot cycles that affect recorded video continuity.
What size power supply do I need for 8 PoE cameras?
If using a PoE switch, sum the per-camera PoE class budget: 8 cameras at 802.3at (PoE+, 30W max) need a switch with at least 240W total PoE budget. Add 20-30% headroom. Many 8-port PoE+ switches advertise 130W total budget — undersized for full-load 802.3at use. For 802.3bt (PoE++, 60-90W) devices like multi-imagers or large PTZs, plan even more aggressively.
Can I mix 12VDC and 24VAC devices on one supply?
Multi-output supplies (Altronix AL600ULPD8, LifeSafety FPO75) provide both 12VDC and 24VAC outputs from a single chassis, each individually fused. Mixing the two on a single output is not safe — voltage and waveform are incompatible. For larger sites, separate dedicated supplies per voltage simplify troubleshooting and isolate failures.
How do I calculate voltage drop on long cable runs?
Voltage drop depends on conductor gauge, current draw, and cable length. For 12VDC at 2A over 100 feet, 18 AWG drops roughly 1V (5%) — borderline acceptable. 16 AWG drops half that. For runs over 100 feet at sustained current, use a 24V supply at the source and step down at the device, or move to PoE which tolerates longer runs at typical commercial distances.
What's the difference between a power supply and a PoE injector?
A traditional power supply delivers DC (or AC) to a device through a dedicated power cable. A PoE injector adds DC power to the unused pairs of an Ethernet cable, so the device receives both power and data on the same Cat5e/Cat6. PoE simplifies installation and is the dominant choice for IP cameras and modern access readers. Traditional supplies are still preferred for high-current devices like maglocks and analog camera installations.
Need help choosing? Talk to a Senior Specialist — direct line 877-277-7147 or request a quote.