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Please note: I am not asking for specific product reccomendations.
I am in the process of expanding wired ethernet cabling in a building during a remodel. I currently have about 20 runs of CAT6a to various rooms and plan on another 16 to 20 more runs as more of the structure is remodeled. The actual ports will likely be heavily under-utilized, only 10-20% of these network runs will typically be in-use at any given time. Nevertheless, I still plan on installing many runs for future proofing and to avoid needing small 5 or 8 port switches in rooms.
These runs of cables will terminate at a central location in the basement, and will be connected to 1 or 2 network switches with all runs being connected.
My understanding of 802.3az from reading wikipedia is that the switch is able to turn off ports that are not active and thus save electricity. Since I will have a low utilization of connected ports, on the surface, this seems like it would be a big deal.
What I would like to know is if a switch supporting the IEEE 802.3az / Energy Efficient Ethernet standard would be worth the extra cost (over a less efficient switch) for this scenario. I imagine as technology progresses, all switches will support energy efficient features, but currently for those who are budget constrained, an older model switch is significantly cheaper than newer "green" switches.
How much power could an unused port really use? – joeqwerty – 2015-03-23T19:57:21.013
Exactly. I don't know. Hence the question on whether it's important to have a switch that does this. – cathode – 2015-03-23T19:58:45.083
While it is a sensible thing to get, I don't see why you expect to pay much more, if anything, for an 802.3az-enabled switch. – Andrew Morton – 2015-03-23T19:58:58.080
Refurbished pricing is significantly different for newer, energy efficient switches (some which may not even be available refurbished) versus slightly older models. Both myself and my company utilize refurb equipment to save on capex.
Also, is there a reason why this got downvoted with no explanation? I realize it says "home wiring" but the question easily applies to any structured cabling install. And how often do you have 40+ runs of ethernet cabling in a non-professional setting? – cathode – 2015-03-23T20:16:10.720
There is no general rule for this. To answer this, you need to define following items: 1.) which non-802.3az switch you would use, 2.) which 802.3az switch you would use, 3.) cost of each, 4.) power savings in W/hour from using 802.3az switch 5.) cost savings seen by item #4. Then you should have your answer... – jlehtinen – 2015-03-23T20:30:31.350