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Document how to use the PoE HAT #135

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geerlingguy opened this issue Dec 29, 2018 · 17 comments
Open

Document how to use the PoE HAT #135

geerlingguy opened this issue Dec 29, 2018 · 17 comments

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@geerlingguy
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geerlingguy commented Dec 29, 2018

I just bought four Raspberry Pi PoE HATs, and I'm trying to incorporate them into the cluster... but there are two issues I'm running into currently:

  1. They come with female-to-female 9mm M2.5 spacers that need to be precisely this height so the contact can be made with the GPIO port and the PoE header. So I can't physically screw the Pi into the bone-style clear case using it's screws and have the HAT on top of those screws.
  2. I can no longer attach my little RGB LED board to the GPIO, especially considering the now-even-more-limited vertical clearance with the Pi and the HAT.
    • I could maybe buy GPIO headers like this 11mm female GPIO header and stack the RGB LED board on top of the PoE HAT... we'll see. I might have to forego the GPIO-controlled LEDs for the time being.
    • Look at this PoE header tutorial/overview post for more tips—if I do end up stacking headers, I will need more vertical clearance (so new standoffs for the entire cluster), and I will need 15mm M2.5 female/male spacers... instead of the 9mm ones I just ordered. Go figure :P
@geerlingguy geerlingguy changed the title Document how I added the PoE HAT Document how to use the PoE HAT Dec 29, 2018
@geerlingguy
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Testing the first HAT on my top Pi, since I can't put them all on and still mount them in the rack... so far it works great. But no LED for now, and that makes me sad :(

Maybe I could make a super trim board and just extend some of the pins (and trim the rest?) custom-printed? I don't have an etcher and don't want to try to DIY it if I don't have to.

The lengths I'm going to just get 5 fewer cables and one fewer power supply...

@geerlingguy
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One thing to mention in setup: all my HATs came with a little anti-static sticker over the 4x4 PoE female header. I had to remove that little sticker before I could install the HAT on the Pi.

@geerlingguy
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I have the HATs all working now. Interestingly, the temperature-controlled fan seems to work even after shutdown... at least AFAICT.

@geerlingguy
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Nevermind, that Pi just hadn't actually shut down all the way yet.

I am noticing a bit of coil whine when the Pis are shut down. It's loud enough that it's a bit of an annoyance.

@poon64
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poon64 commented Jan 9, 2019

Just saw that there is another model of the PiPoE that has pass-through of the GPIO.

@geerlingguy
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@poon64 - ooh, that does look nice. I'm full-bore ahead with the Blinksticks for now, though, and may revisit the PoE HAT later... we'll see. For now I can live with the coil whine. One thing that is a bit annoying (even if it does help overall with CPU) is that the fans are almost constantly running (at least one of them is), and they are pretty darn loud. So not super fun to have sitting in my office right next to me. I'm considering unplugging them and letting the CPUs bake a little.

@geerlingguy
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Just a quick note—while I was disassembling the Pi 3 model B+ edition of the cluster, the first PoE HAT I removed had its PoE header separated on one side as it's kind of a tricky maneuver to separate it from the main Pi board.

So for the rest of the Pis I used a small screwdriver and slowly pried the GPIO pin areas up and down the board so the pins on the PoE header would not be wrenched in a funny way.

I had to go re-solder the joints and clamp down the tiny PoE header using a wrench!

@ndom91
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ndom91 commented Jul 20, 2019

Im about to go ahead and build this myself. Quick question regarding the PoE hats.

Is using the 9mm aluminum spacers you linked above enough clearance to operate the fans of the PoE hats when the Pis are setup in the typical cluster stack?

Could you also possibly link which "case" / acrylic base you used for this specifically?

Thanks so much!

@shailensukul
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The PoE Hat here says it is only compatible with the Pi 3B+:

Compatible only with Raspberry Pi 3 B+ that has PoE pins

Has anyone been able to install with the Pi 4B ?
TIA

@JJJ
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JJJ commented Sep 19, 2019

There are several different PoE hats floating around, some masquerading as if they are official, but in my experience, 2 different ones have worked for me on 2 4Gb Pi 4’s.

@shailensukul
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Found a supported one here

@geerlingguy
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@shailensukul - I am using the official Pi PoE HAT without issue on all my Pi 4s. See the official product page: https://www.raspberrypi.org/products/poe-hat/

@shailensukul
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@shailensukul - I am using the official Pi PoE HAT without issue on all my Pi 4s. See the official product page: https://www.raspberrypi.org/products/poe-hat/

Same link as mine :-)

@stale
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stale bot commented Mar 6, 2020

This issue has been marked 'stale' due to lack of recent activity. If there is no further activity, the issue will be closed in another 30 days. Thank you for your contribution!

Please read this blog post to see the reasons why I mark issues as stale.

@stale stale bot added the stale label Mar 6, 2020
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stale bot commented Mar 25, 2020

This issue is no longer marked for closure.

@stale stale bot removed the stale label Mar 25, 2020
@DonBower
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DonBower commented Oct 5, 2021

I have seen some heat issues on my RPi4 with heat sinks.
How is the temperature of these RPi4s with PoE HAT?

@robert-christian
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Might you consider adding an 8.5mm spacer to raise the POE hat and add heatsinks underneath? For example, this header extension could raise the POE hat by 8.5mm, allowing the use of an 8.0mm heatsink, as in this heatsink set. It appears that it would still allow the unit into many mounting options for clusters, and having a heatsink should greatly reduce the fan noise, as the fan will be significantly more effective.

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