@4Bob
Hey
Hopefully have some answers for you!
The switch alone with 2x GB up-links consumes 4 watts.
When the AP is on, the sw power in total goes up to 14 watts.
Is this difference due to the PoE being provided?
The 2008P v3 has a draw of 8w for the switch (with all ports connected) so if you are running 2x links, 4w seems about right...
The increase to 14w is again expected, and if honest a bit lower than I would have guessed. The 2008P can provide up to 62watts of POE to connected devices, then add the switch itself for a maximum draw of around 70w under full load. In your case the EAP610 appears to be drawing around 10watts which is below its specified 14watts (according to the manual). This seems to be within expectations, and yes the extra difference is the POE draw from the switch.
Is there any way to reduce this? Reduceing transmit power of 2.4 and 5 Ghz to the minimum 7 and 9 db do not take much effect (13Watt). during this test were less than 15 Client’s connect and no traffic generated.
14watts is absolutely nothing in terms of power, its literally 12v 1.13 amps! Your AP is pulling below the watts mentioned in specifications so its really as light as you can get.
Changing power levels etc wont make any difference. With just 15 clients the device isn't working hard, ~12watts is likely as low as it can go. For the record all WiFi 6 APs pull more power than their predecessor (WiFi5)
I bought the EAP610 because it is currently available and its dimension is simply contemporary compared to the rest of the tp fleet
From its specification 50% transmit power should be fairly enough. Isn't lower consumption to be expected then?
What AP’s are you using in terms of save energy? I need 2 more.
Transmit power is purely respective to the area you are trying to cover, as a general rule of thumb however its best to leave this on AUTO and not start fiddling too much with it unless you have completed a good site survey? Also 50% transmit power doesnt mean 50% power draw, its a logarithmic graph for this. The chipset running the AP may require say 10watts regardless, so increasing the transmit power at the antenna may only add 1 to 2watts from low to high.
In terms of saving energy, you could go for WiFi 5 devices as they only pull around 7watts. However, if minimal changes in wattage at this level is a concern to you then I would advise against using WiFi as its inherently a very inefficient method of communication in that scenario
For the record, the 2008P can support up to 62watts load via POE, so would therefore happily power 4x of the EAP610s