





🔗 Double the cameras, half the cables—power your surveillance smarter!
The IPCamPower POE Combiner Splitter Adapter enables running two IP cameras over a single Ethernet cable, compatible with all POE switches, NVRs, and cameras supporting 802.3af/at standards and both Mode A and B. Featuring IP68-rated weatherproof connectors, it ensures durable outdoor use while significantly reducing cabling costs and installation time with a simple plug-and-play design.










| ASIN | B08JS45B89 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #42 in Surveillance Camera Cables |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars (515) |
| Date First Available | September 22, 2020 |
| Item Weight | 3 ounces |
| Item model number | IPCP-212XD |
| Manufacturer | IPCamPower |
| Product Dimensions | 6.75 x 1 x 1 inches |
L**C
Simple and easy
I had a wire that went bad (water intrusion fouled the pass through connector). Being the cameras were next to each other facing opposite directions, I installed this and worked perfectly! I did try it as well on a longer run I have out of curiosity and it was not enough to power two cameras over 250 feet away. I installed a switch and split the feeds that way to supply power to each camera as It would only supply one feed not two. But for price and if it’s a quick fix or permanent install they’re super easy to install!
T**J
Great Product! Huge Life Saver!
Product works amazing, had a 2 camara run where one of my 2 cables went bad, instead of running a new cable, just put this on the good cable and whalla, back in action, used with an REOLINK system, no issues. Left the dip switches on the factory setting with no issue.
R**P
WOW! What a great solution!
I had a buried line running in conduit to a tree for a camera and realized, I could eliminate 2 others from my house if I had another one in the same tree....IPCamPower to the rescue! Worth the money vs. time/effort to run another line. Initially, only 1 of the ports was active, but flipping the switch for that port fixed it. I'm assuming my cables are not as expected. I was VERY happy when it worked. I highly recommend it. It seems well-built and the instructions are fine...really, plug it in and go. If something is not working, try flipping switches (1 thing at a time, also make sure the cable you're using works, etc..). I had a bit of a tough time cramming all of the cables and the adapter into the junction box. I could have left it all out in the weather using the included caps. I'm very pleased. I see no loss of signal over the 2 cameras now running over the 1 cable. Power is good. I didn't measure anything but the video is perfect from both cameras. I'm running an 8MP and 5MP Foscam camera with no problems.
Z**A
Working great for long run with 2 cameras on POE
I’ve been using this splitter for more than 20 months. Connectivity has been excellent, no perceptible drop outs. Clear 4 mp video with Dahua cameras. 20 to 30 fps main stream. Perfect when the are two cameras a distance away and only one Ethernet cable is available. Used with cat 5 cable. Now if I could only electrify the camera housing to discourage spiders….
M**B
It works fine, but the waterproofing is a little iffy
It works, but I would have changed a few things... thing 1, the waterproof connectors are junk. I've done plenty of outdoor POE camera installs and there are connectors that work, and connectors that don't. These don't. I always use dielectric grease in the plugs to help with moisture resistance and even though I did that, I had this unit out for one day. One day! And rain came, water got in, and some of the cheap contacts in there rusted out. Probably shorted the POE if I had to guess (no damage to the switch though, a good POE switch knows when that happens and cuts off power). Thing 2, rather than having RJ-45 sockets on the output side, I would have preferred RJ-45 plugs. That's just me, so maybe there should be an option. As it is, for my install I had two cameras right there on a pole, basically facing forward and backward. So to use this, I had to grab a couple short cables to stick in between which just means even more watertight connectors to deal with, etc. When I had my water ingress and rusted pin, I just got done snipping off that particular socket (I think it was camera 1). I tested which color wires went to which pins so I could just wire it up to a new RJ-45 plug, which is currently working okay, and now I've avoided one extra ethernet cable on my setup. However, there's precious little slack on those wires where it splits out, so there's no way I could get a waterproof connector on. I'll have to stick with electrical tape and the aforementioned dielectric grease. Plus it helps to position the connection in a way that gravity will not let water pool into the socket itself. For anyone else who might need to rewire this... I didn't cut off the pigtail going to the 2nd camera, but at least on the first one (and you know which one is #1 because it's using pins 1,2,3 and 6 ... the other one uses 4,5,7,8), the wire colors are: #1 = white, #2 = yellow, #3 = black, and #6 = red. Wire those to an RJ-45 plug and you can do it too. Bear in mind, these wires in there are kind of cheap stranded wires, so good luck pushing it into your RJ-45. I tried and tried... eventually I had to strip back just a little bit of the wire itself and tin it with fresh solder, and that lets you push it into the plug and crimp it. It's also a pain in the neck to wire when you're only dealing with 4... pushing in all 8 wires is pretty easy because you just line them up and go. With 4, and using 1,2,3,6, it's kind of tricky to get it just right, so it takes some time and patience. Now, I figure I could have returned this since it's literally 2 days old and already rusted and broken, but I can't say for sure if the water issue was my fault or the crummy waterproof connector, so I sucked it up and fixed it on my own. For all the other connections, I made sure to use generous electrical tape now on all those joints. I figure water just got in past the rubber grommet where the wire goes in, because it's not really that tight, so taping it there to prevent water from getting there in the first place helps. I've done that in other spots where the connector seemed dubious. Time will tell if it all holds.
C**W
All PoE splitters are not the same
I bought one about six months ago after researching. Then bought a few more! Was a little unsure with the first one if it would work initially, given the power draw by two devices. But it has a switch for two types of wiring, good just in case! And I used the higher power PoE+ switch that was 802.3AT compliant. PoE switches that are only 802.3AF compliant don't put out nearly as much power on the line. So make sure your PoE switch is 802.3AF (PoE+) compliant. May work with one that's only 802.3AT, but I wouldn't try it to find out unless you already had one there. The better PoE+ switches aren't expensive. I had a PoE wired Ring cam, but wanted to add a Reolink PTZ camera about 15ft from the Ring cam that was also wired PoE without running an entire new cable. Easy to install, and both devices powered up and connected without any issues. Still running without a glitch 4 months later. So if you were going to use it to connect say two Ring or similar PoE cameras, it would have no problem with it as I'm fairly sure the Reolink PTZ cam pulls more power than the Ring cam with it's auto tracking. I wouldn't experiment with cheaper PoE splitters. This one is well engineered and won't let you down.
B**K
منتج جميل .. تم استخدامه لعدة أغراض مثل كامرات المنزل و الانتركوم
D**D
I hadn't heard of devices like this "IPCamPower POE Splitter Kit" before. I've recently upgraded from an 8 channel NVR (using POE), to a 16 channel NVR with POE. The only down side to that upgrade is running the cabling for the extra cameras. I bought this kit hoping it would work, and the good news is it does perfectly. You plug the splitter/ combiner? (with the switches on it) into the two channels on the NVR you want to use, then run the single cable from it. Then plug the other splitter cable onto the end of that single cable. Then run the two cables to your cameras. I used B mode on the combiner end as suggested in the instructions. After the splitter at the camera end, I've got one camera on a 5m cable and the other on an 8M cable- they work fine, even the POE.
K**I
Potwierdzam, że działa z kamerami i rejestratorami Zintronic / Herospeed. Zwykłe rozdzielacze nie działały.
S**Y
Purchased for our home security cameras. I had no prior background with installations and found these were easy to set up! We have 4K cameras - the video/image quality appears unchanged when using these. Perfect for what they are for!
A**ー
よく分かりません。 poe電源から5m先に1台目のカメラが有り、そこから分岐して3m先にもう1台追加でカメラを取付たら1台は読込みますがもう1台は全く読み込まない、 カメラが悪いのかと思い接続を変えても変わらない。 LANはカテ5e、B結線。カメラは既存と同機種。 poe電源付近で2台接続したら映る… 離れると映らない…? 調べても外国産なので細い説明は無く 自宅使用なので考えるのは辞めました。 コンパクトで良いと思買いましたがちょっと残念。
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2 months ago
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