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Practical experience with outside "security" cameras, PoE and any recommendations?

Featured Replies

I am considering installing 4/5 cameras outside. 3 would be PoE connected to an NVR with PoE powered ports - ideally I want to avoid having to buy a separate port switch. Potentially 2 of them will be next to each other and therefore may be run off a splitter which is apparently feasible. One or possibly 2 may have to be wireless as running the cable properly is not overly feasible. The NVR will be connected to my home network routers running on OpenWRT.

 

I am not interested in any subscription based cloud system.

 

I have been reading a fair bit online but it most of what I have read is very US focused especially cable company best practices.

 

Some specific questions -

PoE - a couple of said companies talked about not laying ethernet cable within some feet of electrical wiring unless using shielded but then preferably they recommend not using shielded for other reasons......Again if I do this the main run would be next to a conduit with wiring supplying an outside light........

For those with outside cameras did you have earth protection at all and how did you do that?

Bury cable - anybody know where to buy? (some systems already seem to be bundled with 18m or so of cable but no idea of the quality).

 

NVR - from reading  certain brands of camera only seem to work with that brand's NVR. Ideally I would like to have a system where the NVR stays constant but possibly I may add different cameras so again any experience of this.

 

Cameras - I do not need sirens and voice communication - land is not big enough to require it. Face comprehension at ideally 10m at night would be good and any recs. for how good a camera one would need for that. Working on the basis if it it can do that at night it should be good for daylight........Not decided if I want continuous recording or just movement based.

Any bad experiences with cameras in the extremes of Thailand weather?

 

Budget - not sure but definitely not high end.

 

Any do"s, dont"s or gotchas that you can suggest?

 

 

  • Author
6 minutes ago, OneMoreFarang said:

I can highly recommend watching some of his videos.

Thanks. Yes I saw your rec in a thread from last year I think it was - poster wanted an equivalent to Arlo or similar.

Just now, topt said:

Thanks. Yes I saw your rec in a thread from last year I think it was - poster wanted an equivalent to Arlo or similar.

One of those videos:

 

 

  • Author
17 minutes ago, OneMoreFarang said:

One of those videos:

Was looking briefly at his site the other night and did not see that one. Very relevant. Thanks

40 minutes ago, OneMoreFarang said:

I used Reolink PoE cameras

 

The guy from this YouTube channel compared many cameras, describes principles, etc.

I can highly recommend watching some of his videos.

The Hook Up - YouTube

 

You don't need earthing for the cameras.

 

I bought my cameras here:

https://reolinkdirect.aliexpress.com/store/4445019

 

I think he meant the earth as a shield against RF interference.

2 minutes ago, carlyai said:

I think he meant the earth as a shield against RF interference.

No need

  • Author

One article but not the one I was looking for -

https://reolink.com/blog/protect-outdoor-security-camera-from-lightning/

 

This was the one I was looking for  https://www.truecable.com/blogs/cable-academy/into-the-great-outdoors-running-ethernet-cable-outside

 

start with this part of way down the page

Do I need shielded Ethernet cable for outdoors?

43 minutes ago, topt said:

Do I need shielded Ethernet cable for outdoors?

NO!

17 hours ago, OneMoreFarang said:

used Reolink PoE cameras

+1 on those.

I have 6 outside PoE cameras 2 indoor wired or wireless cameras the Reolink 16 port NVR all powered through a big ish UPS that is probably good for almost a day of power cut

 

for out doors I have 4 fixed RLC-842A cameras, a RLC-823A camera for the gate area and a TrackMix for the outside kitchen. Inside I have 2 X E1 Pro’s.

 

I am thinking of adding a second TrackMix or RLC-823A to cover most of the garden and possibly another E1 pro so the workshop has full coverage and maybe an E1 pro for the paint room

 

we have 3 rooms with no coverage, our bedroom, computer room and outside paint room 

 All of these have been running 24/7/365 for about 2 years AFIR 

  • Author
2 hours ago, sometimewoodworker said:

I have 6 outside PoE cameras

 

Thanks. Any learning points with installing PoE that would be useful to know. What kind of cable and is it in conduit where applicable?

Did you earth any of the cameras and any issues with Thai weather - I notice the TrackMix you mention is only IP65 for example?

 

8 minutes ago, topt said:

 

Thanks. Any learning points with installing PoE that would be useful to know. What kind of cable and is it in conduit where applicable?

Did you earth any of the cameras and any issues with Thai weather - I notice the TrackMix you mention is only IP65 for example?

 

PoE uses mostly 48V. Why would you need earth for that?

Standard LAN cable should do the job. At least my camaras came with a water protected LAN connector.

 

  • Author
40 minutes ago, OneMoreFarang said:

Why would you need earth for that?

I don't know hence asking especially as in the reolink link I posted above it states -

Quote

Thus, when installing a security camera system outside your home, you should use a proper grounding system and avoid mounting your camera to a metal structure. These lightning surge protection tips will help minimize the risk of a strike.

 

And why I repeated the question to someone who has an install with outside cameras. Having been the recipient of lightning strike damage in the past it is a concern.

2 hours ago, topt said:

I don't know hence asking especially as in the reolink link I posted above it states -

 

And why I repeated the question to someone who has an install with outside cameras. Having been the recipient of lightning strike damage in the past it is a concern.

 

At least the cameras which I have (Reolink PoE) don't have anything to connect earth.

If the cameras are exposed somewhere high, then maybe you should make sure there is some lightning protection. But I guess (not sure) you would need lightning protection on such a place even without camera. 

8 hours ago, sometimewoodworker said:

+1 on those.

I have 6 outside PoE cameras 2 indoor wired or wireless cameras the Reolink 16 port NVR all powered through a big ish UPS that is probably good for almost a day of power cut

 

for out doors I have 4 fixed RLC-842A cameras, a RLC-823A camera for the gate area and a TrackMix for the outside kitchen. Inside I have 2 X E1 Pro’s.

 

I am thinking of adding a second TrackMix or RLC-823A to cover most of the garden and possibly another E1 pro so the workshop has full coverage and maybe an E1 pro for the paint room

 

we have 3 rooms with no coverage, our bedroom, computer room and outside paint room 

 All of these have been running 24/7/365 for about 2 years AFIR 

Do you live in a bad neighbourhood?

  • Author
4 hours ago, GreasyFingers said:

Do you live in a bad neighbourhood?

There is always one unfortunately......:coffee1:

On 12/21/2024 at 6:44 PM, GreasyFingers said:

Do you live in a bad neighbourhood?

Not at all, however the saying “it’s better to have and not need, than to need and not have” is one I have based my life on, we also have a couple of dogs and 4 cats so we can communicate wherever we are, SWMBO liked watching them from 6,000 miles away, when we were in the north of Scotland.

 

On 12/21/2024 at 12:48 PM, topt said:

 

Thanks. Any learning points with installing PoE that would be useful to know. What kind of cable and is it in conduit where applicable?

Did you earth any of the cameras and any issues with Thai weather - I notice the TrackMix you mention is only IP65 for example?

 

The most expensive cable is the one that is 5cm too short! 
the external cameras have either an enclosed Ethernet cable (4 of them) an exterior cable outdoor cable that is strung beside our our power conduit or an integral wire supported external cable. Any junction has 3M amalgamating tape encapsulation and so is 100% water proof 

 

On 12/21/2024 at 12:48 PM, topt said:

I notice the TrackMix you mention is only IP65 for example?

Quote

IP65 = Water resistant. “Protected against water jets from any angle”


 

Quote

IP67 = Water resistant plus. “Protected against the events of temporary submersion (10 minutes)”*Do NOT submerge IP67 LED lights for extended periods, these are not waterproof.

 

What do you think! 
I don’t pressure wash them. But I do have the TrackMix behind a support for a lean-to roof

Don't install them under a waterfall!

On 12/21/2024 at 5:35 PM, OneMoreFarang said:

If the cameras are exposed somewhere high, then maybe you should make sure there is some lightning protection. But I guess (not sure) you would need lightning protection on such a place even without camera. 

A near strike will fry the camera with or without lightning protection.

A direct strike will probably melt the camera

The TrackMix has no earthing requirements.

  • 2 months later...

one question, is your home alone for, lets say 1 or 2 month or maybe longer ?

 

In this case, a single PoE injector is better, cause when only one part has a failure, the other cams are still working.

The disadvantage, the red ans are loving the power sockets, the lifetime of the cams outside is really limited,

avoid high temperatures, a cam under an old true satellite dish will have a longer lifetime, than a cam under the sun.

If you have 5 cams, buy 10 cams and configurate them,

that every cam has its ready to use spare part.

Its all about life - work balance, so place the cams on "easy to reach" positions, where the replacement is not a dangerous act.

The outsite power lines should have an RCBo, but if you leave the house for a longer period, you should bridge the RCBO,

cause in case, if its activated, all your outdoor cams are dead.

 

 

  • 7 months later...

I've tried several systems and settled on some using the v380 pro app on my phone or pc.

Can view in realtime or from memory card placed in each camera from you phone/tablet/pc from anywhere in the world with alert screen captures sent to your viewing device in real time.

32gb memory card will record 24/7 for around a week before recycling.

Can connect using network cable or WiFi (I use WiFi).

No need to subscribe to their cloud at all.

For 440bht each, you get a fixed hd camera plus a remote drivable camera.

https://s.lazada.co.th/s.ZZcUMy

 

Downside is a 5 second advert each time you open the app.

Which is not too bad.

 

Just noticed this thread revived by a spammer looking to sell her products in the USA.

spammer reported to mods.

2 hours ago, BritManToo said:

No need to subscribe to their cloud at all.

But it is still using their cloud right ?  otherwise you couldn't view it from anywhere in the world.....what happens when they suddenly go bust ?

2 hours ago, johng said:

But it is still using their cloud right ?  otherwise you couldn't view it from anywhere in the world.....what happens when they suddenly go bust ?

Under 400bht for the double camera.

I've been using 3 for the past years.

1 broke after 2 years, thinking not much risk involved.

 

It's quite good getting the intruder alerts, and fun getting creature alerts overnight.

  • Author
20 hours ago, johng said:

But it is still using their cloud right ?  otherwise you couldn't view it from anywhere in the world.

Not if he can access his network using a vpn from outside. Same as many systems especially if using a DVR

18 minutes ago, topt said:

Not if he can access his network using a vpn from outside.

 

True  but I have doubts that @BritManToo  is using a DVR and  VPN.

13 minutes ago, johng said:

True  but I have doubts that @BritManToo  is using a DVR and  VPN.

Most of my devices register themselves with online computers that forward my data.

That's why I choose them ........

v360pro ....... linked via the cameras own servers in China

Synology NAS ...... linked via Synology cloud server

Plex server ....... linked through Plex cloud server

Tailscale ........ distributed VPN point to point network link if I need it. 

  • Author
1 hour ago, johng said:

 

True  but I have doubts that @BritManToo  is using a DVR and  VPN.

You were right - hence I guess why he didn't acknowledge your point earlier.

1 hour ago, BritManToo said:

Most of my devices register themselves with online computers that forward my data.

Thanks for the clarification. 

 

15 minutes ago, topt said:

You were right

I get lucky sometimes 😋

I've had good results from this camera

easy to not use its inbuilt cloud service just skip it in the setup

no need to download an app just use its inbuilt web page  at http://192.168.1.108

 

https://www.amazon.com/Loryta-Starlight-Weatherproof-Outdoor-Definition/dp/B08133J7SC?th=1

 

its a re branded  Dahua  ..there are cheaper equivalents on Lazada  from Dahua themselves  but  I was in the UK at the time and it got good reviews  from a trusted vendor and didn't want to risk getting a fake ..up for 10 months without a glitch  using LAN cable and 12 volt power   it does have POE  but I'm not using that.

 

I also had good result from a virtual DVR  called AgentDVR   running in a docker container on my NAS  no cloud needed.

 

https://www.ispyconnect.com/docs/agent/about

12 hours ago, topt said:

didn't realise they were available in the UK

I ordered from Amazon delivered to London England no problems...bit slow but as expected.

 

The camera also records and streams video/audio that is standard codec can be played directly with VLC so it is easy to use with a wide variety of DVR and software...unlike a lot of the cheapo cams that use proprietary codec or obscure and out of spec codecs to encode the video.

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