- May 11, 2018
- 15
- 1
Hello,
I've got a few questions on the camera ports for NVR's that I need help understanding.
I suspect I have a rebranded TVT NVR. It has 1 LAN port and 16 Camera ports.
I have set up a few other nvr's in the past. What I usually do is just plug each camera directly into the camera ports.
I have discovered that each camera comes with the exact same fixed IP and when plugged into the NVR, it automatically changes the cameras ip's to not conflict with each other.
I have a new scenario for this job where I have 3 cameras coming into a POE switch then 1 cable back to NVR. If I plug that 1 cable into a camera port on the nvr it will not work. If I change the ip's for each camera via iptool the ip's don't stick.
If I do the same thing but connect to the LAN port instead it works and sticks, but that means my IP cameras are exposed to my local network so if the local network speeds are slow, then the cameras will be slow???, and I have to allow IP for my camera in my local network.
I know there are NVR's which have 1 LAN port and 1 Camera ports (16 ch NVR's) which are probably designed to allow me to do what I want but these type of NVR for some reason don't. Is there a way to separate the cameras from my local network on this NVR by pluggin into one of the camera ports?
Hope I make sense.
I've got a few questions on the camera ports for NVR's that I need help understanding.
I suspect I have a rebranded TVT NVR. It has 1 LAN port and 16 Camera ports.
I have set up a few other nvr's in the past. What I usually do is just plug each camera directly into the camera ports.
I have discovered that each camera comes with the exact same fixed IP and when plugged into the NVR, it automatically changes the cameras ip's to not conflict with each other.
I have a new scenario for this job where I have 3 cameras coming into a POE switch then 1 cable back to NVR. If I plug that 1 cable into a camera port on the nvr it will not work. If I change the ip's for each camera via iptool the ip's don't stick.
If I do the same thing but connect to the LAN port instead it works and sticks, but that means my IP cameras are exposed to my local network so if the local network speeds are slow, then the cameras will be slow???, and I have to allow IP for my camera in my local network.
I know there are NVR's which have 1 LAN port and 1 Camera ports (16 ch NVR's) which are probably designed to allow me to do what I want but these type of NVR for some reason don't. Is there a way to separate the cameras from my local network on this NVR by pluggin into one of the camera ports?
Hope I make sense.