MR100/MR110 - Outdoor :: Voltage operating range range

MR100/MR110 - Outdoor :: Voltage operating range range

MR100/MR110 - Outdoor :: Voltage operating range range
MR100/MR110 - Outdoor :: Voltage operating range range
a week ago
Model: TL-MR100-Outdoor  
Hardware Version:
Firmware Version:

Hello,

 

does anybody have any idea what could be an accepted voltage range for MR100 or MR110 Outdoor version of 4G router? Specs show that it has DC jack input that expects 12 V...I'm asking this because I have one 4 cell LiFePo4 battery that can be used for supply, whose voltage range is 12.0 V (almost empty) - 13.6 V (almost full). Should be 13.6 V still fine or could be too high? 

 

I saw that MR100 router (indoor version) comes with 9 V/0.85 A power supply, on the other side it looks like that MR100 - Outdoor has a higher consumption with 12 V / 1 A. What are actual power consumptions of MR100 (indoor) and MR100-Outdoor version?

 

Thx!

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2 Reply
Re:MR100/MR110 - Outdoor :: Voltage operating range range
Yesterday

  @D3jcku 

Hi, welcome to the community.

You can refer to the data sheet of MR100-outdoor:https://static.tp-link.com/upload/product-overview/2025/202503/20250327/TL-MR100-Outdoor(EU)1.0_Datasheet.pdf

External Power Supply: 12V/1A DC;48V/0.375A Passive PoE; 44-57V/0.35A 802.3af standard PoE

The fully charged voltage of the battery (13.6V) exceeds the device's maximum allowable input voltage, which may trigger a protective shutdown or potentially damage the device.

Best regards.

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Re:MR100/MR110 - Outdoor :: Voltage operating range range
22 hours ago - last edited 22 hours ago

  @David-TP 

Thanks for your reply.

 

Do you have any idea what could be an average power consumption of this router? I'm thinking that it could be lower than 10 W, so 12 W power supply is needed just to cover current spikes?
I'm planning to use a solar battery as a source of power, however I'm thinking about using a 10 W power supply (which can deliver also up to 15 W in spikes) which would provide 12 V at the output independently if input would be lower or higher than output voltage. Would a voltage regulator with 10 W of rated power be enough?

 

Many thanks.

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