condor11 0 Posted August 11, 2016 Hi Everyone, I found this forum researching CCTV. Long story short - I am having a new house built and need to decide on prewiring for security cameras. The builder offers to prewire each camera location with CAT5e, Coax and 16/2. Are there any other wires I should run to each camera location, beside the above 3, to make sure I am future-proof? Also I understnad the use of Cat5e and 16/2, but I am not sure what is the Coax really useful for in this day and age? Do analog cameras still make it worthwile to install as opposed to IP cameras? Or is there any other use for it? Thanks in advance! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jeromephone 6 Posted August 11, 2016 I would just run cat 6 and run spares where you think you might add an IP device in the future phone led light access control etc etc. If you use cat 6 it is often 23 gauge and there has been talk of upping the POE power for some devices so the 23 gauge would carry a little more current. Make sure you are using solid copper from not cca. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
condor11 0 Posted August 12, 2016 I would just run cat 6 and run spares where you think you might add an IP device in the future phone led light access control etc etc. If you use cat 6 it is often 23 gauge and there has been talk of upping the POE power for some devices so the 23 gauge would carry a little more current. Make sure you are using solid copper from not cca. Thanks! Can you clarify on "led light access control"? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
tomcctv 190 Posted August 12, 2016 Hi. If the cost is good from your builder then ave him run coax cat and power ... That way you can run anything you like Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jeromephone 6 Posted August 13, 2016 I need to use commas more. LED lighting is coming in and will be POE powered and several mfg have networked access control system that power door strikes and card readers via POE. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
baspinall 0 Posted August 15, 2016 I'd go with the Cat. 6 as well and use POE down the road when the cameras are install (POE IP cameras). Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
tube tech 1 Posted August 19, 2016 old, and old school, electronics tech here. my electronic systems tend to grow and expand, and I don't have to pay for skilled labor, so I tend to plan for growth IP cameras consume bandwidth. more cameras, more bandwidth. The DVR consumes bandwidth. how much do you have? 4 analog cameras to one DVR minimizes bandwidth consumption. If I was doing new construction ( in NM, where innovation in building is not a crime ) I would run PVC tubing for use as low voltage and fiber optic conduit. I would cut windows in the tubing at corners and reattach the cutout with a hinge. I would run Cat 5 or 6, fiber optic cable, RG59, 12 VDC and 5 VDC. I currently have a large junction box on my back wall that is big enough to hold 3 DVRS, 4 VDAs and an RF modulator. If I did it again I would get a bigger box that held 4 DVRs, because you always seem to need one more. I do not think in terms of camera locations. I think in terms of breakout boxes. many locations that were once camera locations are now multi camera locations; one each east, south and west. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Boogieman 1 Posted August 19, 2016 old, and old school, electronics tech here. my electronic systems tend to grow and expand, and I don't have to pay for skilled labor, so I tend to plan for growth IP cameras consume bandwidth. more cameras, more bandwidth. The DVR consumes bandwidth. how much do you have? 4 analog cameras to one DVR minimizes bandwidth consumption. If I was doing new construction ( in NM, where innovation in building is not a crime ) I would run PVC tubing for use as low voltage and fiber optic conduit. I would cut windows in the tubing at corners and reattach the cutout with a hinge. I would run Cat 5 or 6, fiber optic cable, RG59, 12 VDC and 5 VDC. I currently have a large junction box on my back wall that is big enough to hold 3 DVRS, 4 VDAs and an RF modulator. If I did it again I would get a bigger box that held 4 DVRs, because you always seem to need one more. I do not think in terms of camera locations. I think in terms of breakout boxes. many locations that were once camera locations are now multi camera locations; one each east, south and west. Its amazing that in 2016 and folks are still posting misinformation about IP cameras consuming network bandwidth. THIS IS NOT TRUE. If you home run the cameras to the NVR as you would with a traditional analog system then there is ZERO extra load placed on the system. If you connect the cameras to a POE SWITCH and the NVR to the same switch or to a cascading switch again there is ZERO extra bandwidth on the network. EVEN if you put the cameras on the network, a standard intallation of 8-16 cameras would not put a dent in a gigabit network.. Please stop misleading. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
GH75 0 Posted August 19, 2016 Run 2-3 Cat6 anywhere you think you may need cameras, and you are good. 16-2 would be helpful if you got any large PTZ cameras that are not POE. Forget the coax Cat6 can run analog which is a for a new install, HD, or IP. As far as bandwidth, like stated earlier, home run everything back to the NVR, and POE switch, that way the camera network is on its network. The only load on the home network is what is streamed remotely when not home. 3 DVR's in a home? Are these 16 channel units? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
tube tech 1 Posted August 21, 2016 3 DVR's in a home? Are these 16 channel units? I assume you are asking me. 1 4 channel in the motorhome, wireless bridge to the house. watches the parking lot, back wall and back door 2 4 channels in a J box on the back of the house, as of 5 PM today. I switched to a different brand that wastes a lot of internal space, but the network interface works with Windows. just not enough room in the J box for 3 of these DVRs, RF modulator and a wireless bridge. these DVRs cover the sides, front and back of the house. 3 4 channel DVRs inside. one is 4 cameras looking out. one covers the hallways. the third covers the living room. wireless bridges because my landlord thinks my falling apart 1923 rented adobe is a priceless historical building, and does not permit drilling holes in what is really a decrepit mud hut. ergo IP over 802.11n, RF via the cable TV cable Share this post Link to post Share on other sites