I’ve been planning my CCTV for almost a year, but there is always another decision to make!!
My existing thoughts for a system are the following:
A DS-7608NI-I2/8P NVR Fitted with a 4TB Western Digital Purple Drive with
5 or 6 cameras attached: Leaning towards all cameras being ColorVu 4MP Ds-2CD2347G1-LU (most probably all 4mm but one maybe 2.8mm)
Recording 24/7, with 14 day storage.
Furthest distance for coverage is approx 10m based upon the positions I have planned: This keeps changing, but 10m is the max!!
I have good street lighting (except between the hrs of 1am-4am) but that lighting can easily be supplemented as required).
I currently run my Nest door camera in colour 24/7 for example.
My house is on a corner plot and I have potential entry points on all sides, so I have to consider camera positions carefully.
Now my plan is to buy the system in 3 stages:
Stage 1 -
1 off ColorVu DS-2CD2347G1-LU at 4mm
1 off DS-1280ZJ-DM21 Junction Box
1 off PSU or POE injector to enable stand alone test and evaluation.
Stage 2 -
1 off DS-7608NI-I2/8P NVR Fitted with a 4TB Western Digital Purple Drive +
2 more cameras + junction boxes as required.
Stage 3 -
Final purchase of remaining cameras and junction boxes as required.
My intention is to use the Stage 1 purchase to verify that the camera can cover the areas I want covered in sufficient quality and that I do have enough background lighting.
Stage 2 is to get the initial CCTV system operational and to confirm that I won’t have a problem with cameras interfering with each other.
My current planned camera positions put two of them on same wall at about 10m distance from each other, but angled so that both cover that wall (and all the ground floor windows and doors along it).
Stage 3 is just to complete the system.
I would of dummy fitted the cameras from the previous stages into my desired positions to verify that they are suitable, or if I need to change position, or use a different focal length or even camera type!!
Does this seem a sensible approach?
I think I just need to actually stop the planning and just get on with it, but I don’t want to make an expensive mistake.
Any thoughts?
Ian
My existing thoughts for a system are the following:
A DS-7608NI-I2/8P NVR Fitted with a 4TB Western Digital Purple Drive with
5 or 6 cameras attached: Leaning towards all cameras being ColorVu 4MP Ds-2CD2347G1-LU (most probably all 4mm but one maybe 2.8mm)
Recording 24/7, with 14 day storage.
Furthest distance for coverage is approx 10m based upon the positions I have planned: This keeps changing, but 10m is the max!!
I have good street lighting (except between the hrs of 1am-4am) but that lighting can easily be supplemented as required).
I currently run my Nest door camera in colour 24/7 for example.
My house is on a corner plot and I have potential entry points on all sides, so I have to consider camera positions carefully.
Now my plan is to buy the system in 3 stages:
Stage 1 -
1 off ColorVu DS-2CD2347G1-LU at 4mm
1 off DS-1280ZJ-DM21 Junction Box
1 off PSU or POE injector to enable stand alone test and evaluation.
Stage 2 -
1 off DS-7608NI-I2/8P NVR Fitted with a 4TB Western Digital Purple Drive +
2 more cameras + junction boxes as required.
Stage 3 -
Final purchase of remaining cameras and junction boxes as required.
My intention is to use the Stage 1 purchase to verify that the camera can cover the areas I want covered in sufficient quality and that I do have enough background lighting.
Stage 2 is to get the initial CCTV system operational and to confirm that I won’t have a problem with cameras interfering with each other.
My current planned camera positions put two of them on same wall at about 10m distance from each other, but angled so that both cover that wall (and all the ground floor windows and doors along it).
Stage 3 is just to complete the system.
I would of dummy fitted the cameras from the previous stages into my desired positions to verify that they are suitable, or if I need to change position, or use a different focal length or even camera type!!
Does this seem a sensible approach?
I think I just need to actually stop the planning and just get on with it, but I don’t want to make an expensive mistake.
Any thoughts?
Ian