this post was submitted on 13 Nov 2023
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Disclaimer: I am not sure if it is right place to ask, but I don't know any better.

  1. I need to mount cameras outside of the house. I have to go with cables through the outside wall. Any hints what kind of pipe for cables is the best to use for outside wall? I want to make it isolated from wet and cold / hot. What kind of mount for camera? I am looking something standard.

random photo (not my wall or camera)

  1. I guess PoE cameras are unnecessary expensive and better to go with Ethernet cable + power separately? What do you recommend? I didn't do research yet.

https://preview.redd.it/dbtvzowyg00c1.png?width=1280&format=png&auto=webp&s=f0968f961a91bd8a6a371bc0ce088299ad93c914

  1. Do you know any nice looking solution to put switch into wall? Sure I can use switch outside of the wall in common way, but I wan to make it look good. I didn't find any good looking solution which let to do it inside of the wall. Unfortunately position in the room for cable is in the worst possible place in the room.

Currently it looks like this, I have to modify it, because from there I have to split internet into more places.

https://preview.redd.it/8q37mpzte00c1.jpg?width=4032&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=f2463b8d9262120775fb7f1dc3515108a1f9f53f

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[–] malwareguy@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Stop and do a ton of research, define your use case and what you actually want before you move forward. Otherwise you may spend a lot of time and money and end up with a camera system that doesn't come close to what you want it to do.

https://ipcamtalk.com/ is a decent set of forums to start learning some, learn about various camera models, etc.

Really define your use case, what are the camera's for, what do you need them to do during the day and night. Many people think that wide field of view at 2.8mm is great because they can see a lot but then discover there aren't enough pixels to tell who someone is from even 15 ft away, and then they discover the ccd is absolute dog shit at night. It's relatively easy to get a decent picture with a tiny undersized ccd during the day with a lot of light, but at night things are different. Make sure you understand DORI (detection, observation, recognition, and identity), measure the distances you're going to be working with so you can cover the important DORI aspects, ensure the field of view, and resolution support what you want. Understand what difficult scenes look like, sun dumping directly into the camera at sunset will fuck up all shitty software based wdr.

Use POE it'll save you headaches. You can buy industrial poe switches that you can place in the attic depending on code / attic temperatures. In fact just buy better camera's it'll save you headaches.

What are you going to use for an NVR? or are you goin to try to use on camera recording?

If you want everything recessed look at buying a small structured media center that'll fit cabling, switches, power, etc.