I have a 16 camera PoE IP NVR system. I live in south Florida. Thunderstorms are an everyday occurrence down here. To date, I have lost 7 cameras, 1 PoE switch, and 2 HDMI transmitters, in the span of 3 different storms.
Each camera is mounted under eave of my residence. The camera has an unused 12v power lead and a Cat5e connection. Each Cat5e cable home-runs to an APC modular ethernet surge protector, then to 16 port PoE switch. The entire system is protected on the front end by an APC Backup UPS. Everything is mounted in a network frame. A copper grounding bar is mounted at the top of the network rack; all components are connected to the grounding bar. The grounding bar is connected to an outdoor grounding rod in the ground via a 6 gauge copper wire.
I will admit, initially I did not have the rack and system grounded to a grounding rod. That omission resulted in the loss of 4 cameras, the PoE switch and HDMI transmitter.
But, after installation of the grounding system, another storm rolled through yesterday and took out 3 cameras and the HDMI transmitter (not groundable, no grounding connection available).
Would grounding each aluminum camera case help?
Alternately, would there be any benefit to grounding the unused 12v power lead?
For reference, the ground pin of the 12v power lead does not connect to camera chassis.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. If this topic is found elsewhere on the forum, please point me to it.
Thanks!!