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Wonderer

How to link to camera some 500m away

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Hi

 

I'm new to this forum and to the CCTV subject and would appreciate some suggestions on how I can set up a camera at the entrance to our smallholding and link it to a desktop computer (currently using XP). We have an internet connection and the computer is connected wirelessly via a router. We are located in the UK.

 

The distance between the computer and the siting of the proposed camera is around 300-400 meters as the crow flies and maybe 400-500 if wired.

 

I expect this is going to cost an arm and a leg to do? Over to you experts...

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Dang, thats a long way. Is there any power source that you can power the camera closer to the cameras location?

 

Not really, unless I involve a neighbour which would prove somewhat complicated. I could site a heavy duty battery (probably 12v) close to the camera - what sort of voltage do they run on?

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12V DC or 24 VAC. The only problem is, what would you do when the battery runs out? It would be a pain to constantly recharge.

 

Besides the power trying to reach that far, I also think you will have problems with a video signal going that far. Perhaps some Cat5 or fibre guys on this board can help you on that. I am strictly a coax guy and I think that may be a little out of reach for coax.

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There are a number of ways to do this, but you're right, none will be particularly cheap (maybe just an arm and a few toes).

 

You could do an analog camera over UTP using quality baluns... but with analog, you'd need a capture device of some sort in your PC (and really, for security recording, a dedicated PC is highly recommended). A dual-voltage (12VDC/24VAC) camera should work alright at that distance if you feed it from a 28VAC power supply with sufficient wire gauge (might even get away with three of the four pairs in a Cat5e, or better yet, Cat6, which is larger gauge).

 

You could use an IP camera with the aid of ethernet-over-coax adapters as well, many of which extend ethernet's range beyond 100m. This one, for example, claims to support ethernet AND power up to 1km over coax: http://gemelec.com/index.php?page=shop.product_details&flypage=shop.flypage&product_id=704&category_id=68&manufacturer_id=0&option=com_virtuemart&Itemid=1

 

You could also go wireless using a number of different relatively-low-cost WiFi setups (lots of people here use Nanostation), but you'd still need to power the camera and the transmitter.

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Hi

 

I'm new to this forum and to the CCTV subject and would appreciate some suggestions on how I can set up a camera at the entrance to our smallholding and link it to a desktop computer (currently using XP). We have an internet connection and the computer is connected wirelessly via a router. We are located in the UK.

 

The distance between the computer and the siting of the proposed camera is around 300-400 meters as the crow flies and maybe 400-500 if wired.

 

I expect this is going to cost an arm and a leg to do? Over to you experts...

 

 

if you can run coax cable to were you are locating the camera. then you will have no problem using a VDS video sender. i have used many and they are good for 8-900m and they are not expensive at all ...... this gives your power/video/and sound down 1 coax cable and you can use any standard cctv camera.

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if you can run coax cable to were you are locating the camera. then you will have no problem using a VDS video sender. i have used many and they are good for 8-900m and they are not expensive at all ...... this gives your power/video/and sound down 1 coax cable and you can use any standard cctv camera.

 

Sweet. And that will work with a 24 VAC power supply at a straight shot of 8-900M? Which model do you use?

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There are a number of ways to do this, but you're right, none will be particularly cheap (maybe just an arm and a few toes).

 

You could do an analog camera over UTP using quality baluns... but with analog, you'd need a capture device of some sort in your PC (and really, for security recording, a dedicated PC is highly recommended). A dual-voltage (12VDC/24VAC) camera should work alright at that distance if you feed it from a 28VAC power supply with sufficient wire gauge (might even get away with three of the four pairs in a Cat5e, or better yet, Cat6, which is larger gauge).

 

You could use an IP camera with the aid of ethernet-over-coax adapters as well, many of which extend ethernet's range beyond 100m. This one, for example, claims to support ethernet AND power up to 1km over coax: http://gemelec.com/index.php?page=shop.product_details&flypage=shop.flypage&product_id=704&category_id=68&manufacturer_id=0&option=com_virtuemart&Itemid=1

 

You could also go wireless using a number of different relatively-low-cost WiFi setups (lots of people here use Nanostation), but you'd still need to power the camera and the transmitter.

 

I don't think the Gem IPC-0801 can run Ethernet and power up to 1km, if only Ethernet over coax, it makes sense. With POE, 200-300Meters should be the max. distance. Just my personal opinion, better double check with Gem's sales.

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