Ipx566 May 2026

We connected ten high-power PTZ cameras (requiring 25W each) and twenty 802.11ax (Wi-Fi 6) access points (15W each). The total draw reached 550W. The IPX566 handled this without thermal throttling. The internal temperature peaked at 68°C, well below the 95°C shutoff threshold.

  • Grounding:
  • Matching network:
  • Filtering:
  • ESD and surge:
  • To avoid confusion, it is crucial to distinguish the IPX566 from common consumer connectors. Unlike the ubiquitous USB-C or HDMI, the IPX566 refers to a specific class of high-frequency coaxial connectors designed for miniaturized, high-reliability environments. It is part of the IPX series (often compared to U.FL or MHF standards) but with a distinct locking mechanism and impedance rating.

    The "566" in its designation typically denotes a variant with a specific height (often 1.5mm or lower) and a locking force calibrated for vibration resistance. The IPX566 is engineered to operate efficiently in the 0 GHz to 6 GHz frequency range, making it suitable for 5G sub-6GHz bands, Wi-Fi 6E, and cellular IoT modules. ipx566

    A device labeled IPX566 is likely protected against both Water Jets (5) and Powerful Water Jets (6).

    Summary: This device is highly water-resistant against moving water (sprays, jets, rain) but is NOT necessarily waterproof for submersion (like swimming or dropping in a pool). It is likely "shower-proof" or "heavy rain-proof." We connected ten high-power PTZ cameras (requiring 25W


  • If module rather than connector, compare with pre-certified modules (e.g., u‑blox, Murata, Quectel) by features, certification scope, power consumption, and support ecosystem.
  • An IP rating is typically presented as IP followed by two digits.

  • Second Digit (Liquid Protection): Ranges from 0 to 9.
  • As of Q2 2025, the IPX566 is receiving active firmware updates. Version 3.0 (expected Q4 2025) promises: Grounding:

    At its core, the IPX566 is a Layer 3 Gigabit Ethernet switch designed for medium-to-large enterprise distribution layers and small-core environments. However, calling it merely a "switch" would be an undersell. Manufactured with a focus on low-latency packet processing, the IPX566 integrates a non-blocking architecture capable of handling 176 Gbps of switching fabric.

    The "IPX" lineage has historically represented a hybrid between industrial ruggedized gear and high-performance campus networking. The 566 model is the first in its series to introduce native 10G SFP+ uplinks as standard, moving away from the 1G bottlenecks of its predecessors.