kagz100 0 Posted August 23, 2012 I have finalize all the components needed for a major video surveillance project I'm working on . the cameras are in separate floors ( where is 2-4 ) cameras on certain floors . My manager suggest us to use CAT 6 cabling . What is now left is finding a 8 -12 port POE switch , that has 2 SFP and support cat 6 cabling which I cannot find . Does anyone knows of any ? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
skomo 0 Posted August 23, 2012 you cant go wrong with the Cisco SG-300-10P Switch - L3 - managed - 8 x 10/100/1000 + 2 x combo Gigabit SFP - rack-mountable - PoE Im pretty sure its 15w on each port too Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
thewireguys 3 Posted August 23, 2012 That switch is not full POE on all ports. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
skomo 0 Posted August 24, 2012 That switch is not full POE on all ports. that is correct. its only 62w max... The SG-300-MP should be the one that is full PoE on all ports Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Blake CCTV 3 Posted August 27, 2012 What is your reason for using cat 6 rather cat 5 ? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
kagz100 0 Posted August 30, 2012 to my understanding cat 6 has a higher bandwidth capacity and my organization has heavy machinery so using twisted pair cabling is an advantage Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Blake CCTV 3 Posted August 30, 2012 yes I think you are right about the higher bandwidth as for the heavy machinery if your concern is for the heavy machinery giving you interference then dont worry because they are IP cameras they wont suffer from that kind of inteference. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
kagz100 0 Posted August 30, 2012 but the signals (packet loss ) esp while streaming for live view are going to be affected Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Blake CCTV 3 Posted August 30, 2012 i wouldn't expect that but would be interested to know if anyone has suffered from this, have you had this problem in the past? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
thewireguys 3 Posted August 30, 2012 Cat6 is over kill for camera to switch connections. Cameras only have a 10/100 port that being said it's not a bad idea to use Cat6 if the rest of your building is Ca6 always plan for the future. In your situation I would use shielded cabling if you have to run cabling around electric and heavy machinery. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Grego1 0 Posted October 5, 2012 What is cat5e cable, does it differ greatly from cat5 cable? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ssnapier 0 Posted October 5, 2012 They changed the number of twists per inch on each pair to reduce crosstalk and increase bandwidth from 100Mhz to 350Mhz. Usually the jacket on 5e is thicker too, but that has a lot more to do with buying quality cable than any real spec change. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
GrouchoBoucho 0 Posted October 11, 2012 What is now left is finding a 8 -12 port POE switch , that has 2 SFP and support cat 6 cabling which I cannot find . not sure how a switch "doesn't support" cat6? the cisco sf302-08p is a good one to look at: it's got eight 10/100 poe ports, and two gigabit/sfp combo ports. you don't need to spend extra for gigabit on the camera channels, as most cameras have well under 20mbps bandwidth, and only a very few high-end cameras even have gigabit ports. you also shouldn't need full 15.4w on all channels (it will do up to 15.4w/ch for up to four channels, or 7.5w/ch on all eight) because even ir cameras tend to use 5w or less. as for the cabling, cat5e is more than enough for gigabit; cat6 becomes necessary only if you're going to 10 gig, and if you're looking for sfp support, i assume that means you're looking at fiber interconnects. cat6 won't give you any better noise immunity than cat5e; if you want to be sure, use shielded cat5e, as thewireguys suggests. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites