Bit of an electrical dolt, but replaced an existing wireless radio with a new radio that was powered via PoE from the switch. Using same Cat5 cable, into the same PoE port on the switch, we couldn't power up the new radio.
Fearing that we'd fry the gear, I didn't want to plug the Cat5 patch cable that was currently plugged into the PoE switch port into the LAN port of the PoE injector that came with the new radio. I fearfully tried it and it worked (as in the data link was now completed and all was well).
Question: is there a "shut-off" or "killswitch" routine that happens when a device is plugged into a PoE device or is it just that the LAN port on the PoE injector is not expecting/"requesting" PoE so it doesn't get provided by the switch?
The PoE switch, if it's 802.3af compatible, will not send power to the device (in any amount worth mentioning) until it requests power.
A PoE Injector should either not connect the powered pins to the upstream port, only the downstream port. This would be for 100Mb devices only as 1Gb requires all 4 pairs. For 1Gb devices the PoE injector must protect itself from upstream power sources.
There are 2 standard forms of PoE (there are other forms... but they've never been standardized) ... depending on the kind of PoE required for your device... you may not be using the right flavor.
Active PoE (which is what most switches that support PoE does... ) requires some extra hardware on the device which will apply a small amount of resistance across some wires in the cat5 cable which tells the switch it's ok to send power down the line... and from there the device powers up & goes the rest of the way.
Other devices use "Passive PoE" which is significantly less high-tech. Basically... to setup a 100mbt connection, technically all you need is 4-wires. 1,2,3 and 6. Passive PoE simply disconnects the remaining pins and injects power directly into the wire. This has a significant risk imho to equipment... as you might end up plugging the wrong plug into the wrong port and end up sending power where it can't handle it.
More information on the hardware would be useful...