Father Ted
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Hello,
I'm intending to add some cameras to a shed which will be used for monitoring livestock. As part of this I would like to cover two yards with cameras for security purposes.
I believe that 4 cameras will suffice inside the shed and two exterior cameras for security.
There is currently an old analog system wired from the shed into the house supporting two old cameras - this system is approx 15yrs old.
I was hoping to use the cabling as a wired connection between the house and shed, but as I type this I'm wondering if the cabling would be able to support this goal.
In terms of my installation here is what I was intending:
The first question is will the cabling be sufficient for this task? How do I test that it is? See photos attached of the cabling - sorry for the quality, I was up a ladder with animals nearby, albeit there was someone guarding the ladder. Does this look like a usable connection?
Which is better: 2-3 fixed cameras or a single PTZ camera? I might be able to reduce significantly the number of cameras required by strategically locating a single PTZ. I could then later add additional cameras to cover blind spots as necessary.
This is a large shed 45ft x 100ft with a corrugated tin roof. Is a wifi setup an option here?
Is there a way to control the lights without requiring a wifi device?
My concern with using a wifi bridge from house to shed is that I have concerns about the integrity of such devices and the potential for being hacked into. Is there a robust alternative, if needs be?
Thanks.
I'm intending to add some cameras to a shed which will be used for monitoring livestock. As part of this I would like to cover two yards with cameras for security purposes.
I believe that 4 cameras will suffice inside the shed and two exterior cameras for security.
There is currently an old analog system wired from the shed into the house supporting two old cameras - this system is approx 15yrs old.
I was hoping to use the cabling as a wired connection between the house and shed, but as I type this I'm wondering if the cabling would be able to support this goal.
In terms of my installation here is what I was intending:
- PoE based system with NVR located in house
- Wired connection from house into a ethernet PoE+ network switch with correct power rating for selected cameras
- Ethernet switch located inside an IP66 junction box
- IP66/IP67 bullet cameras with audio (dome type preferred though) inside shed
- Two external IP66/IP67 dome cameras (preferably black to be less visible)
- Camera feed accessible/selectable via internet browser & phone app
- Lights controlled via a Sonoff 4Ch Pro R2 Wifi smart switch - wired feed from network switch to Access Point inside an IP66 box alongside the Sonoff device. Controlled via phone app
- Cameras and NVR to be from same manufacturer for compatibility
The first question is will the cabling be sufficient for this task? How do I test that it is? See photos attached of the cabling - sorry for the quality, I was up a ladder with animals nearby, albeit there was someone guarding the ladder. Does this look like a usable connection?
Which is better: 2-3 fixed cameras or a single PTZ camera? I might be able to reduce significantly the number of cameras required by strategically locating a single PTZ. I could then later add additional cameras to cover blind spots as necessary.
This is a large shed 45ft x 100ft with a corrugated tin roof. Is a wifi setup an option here?
Is there a way to control the lights without requiring a wifi device?
My concern with using a wifi bridge from house to shed is that I have concerns about the integrity of such devices and the potential for being hacked into. Is there a robust alternative, if needs be?
Thanks.