IPC-HDW4231EM-AS dropping connection randomly

trauts14

Getting the hang of it
Mar 19, 2016
252
30
Central NC
my IPC-HDW4231EM-AS randomly drops connection. it is powered by the POE port on my dahua nvr. the cam is approx 250' away from the nvr. all other cams attached to nvr work fine. does the random data dropout seem like a POE issue, or a rj45 connector that is not properly secured? the cam is 60 miles away and i have not had a chance to try out a different POE switch yet.
 
my IPC-HDW4231EM-AS randomly drops connection. it is powered by the POE port on my dahua nvr. the cam is approx 250' away from the nvr. all other cams attached to nvr work fine. does the random data dropout seem like a POE issue, or a rj45 connector that is not properly secured? the cam is 60 miles away and i have not had a chance to try out a different POE switch yet.
Did you use the 568 standard for the cable?
 
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yes, i did use that. really crazy how the cam works for a few hours and drops randomly. hopefully, the problem is a half ass installed rj45 connector on my behalf
Did you recently update firmware? There is an issue with the update..
 
@trauts14
I use a simple cable tester to test connectivity. If the cable passes that test, the RJ-45 wiring is correct. However, that doesn't guarantee that data transfer is up to the standard. To test data transfer rate, you need an advanced cable tester or if you can mirror the ports and capture TCP/IP dump to see if packets are dropped. This always seems to be more than what a typical user can do.
To simplify the test, you should take the cam off your mounting location, bring it close to the switch, hook it up with a 6 ft cable, and see if the cam goes on and off again. If the cam works fine with a 6 ft cable, chances are your wiring is faulty.
If your wiring is faulty, check if there are any kinks, bends, sharp turns, and tangles along the way and straight them out. Also remove the two RJ-45 connectors and make new ones. Some times, the contacts at the RJ-45 don't make good contacts with the wires inside the RJ-45 and that causes a bad connection.
Hope this helps.
 
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I use a simple cable tester to test connectivity. If the cable passes that test, the RJ-45 wiring is correct.
For info - continuity by itself is not a sufficient test for correct cable wiring.
The wiring needs to maintain the required twisted pairs in order to achieve signal integrity.

The wires could be connected in any arbitrary way and will pass a continuity test as long as they match at each end.
But the cable signalling won't work correctly if the twisted pairs are incorrect.
 
For info - continuity by itself is not a sufficient test for correct cable wiring.
The wiring needs to maintain the required twisted pairs in order to achieve signal integrity.

The wires could be connected in any arbitrary way and will pass a continuity test as long as they match at each end.
But the cable signalling won't work correctly if the twisted pairs are incorrect.

You may not pass a cable tester if the wiring is not correct. It checks both wiring standard and continuity.
 
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i finally had a chance to visit the house and the rj45 adapters look solid with the wires well seated. i switched the cable from the nvr (POE) to a standalone switch. the device worked for a day...and then it went occasionally on/off as it had done.

i forgot to take my POE voltage/wattage tester which was my first mistake. also, i probably should have put new rj45 connectors on as process of elimination. ALSO, i should have utilized the spare redundant cable i ran to the cam as process of elimination. im going back this wknd to try again....the correct way.
 
Yeah I have one of those. They're great for verifying conductivity and termination on installed wiring. However they don't test bandwidth performance, which is very important when it comes to ip cams. For that you need a digital test signal and a high speed daq. You might see the telecom tech guy using such a device when there are problems with internet their customer's house... usually a few $1k's worth of high tech gadgetry in a brick size box with graphic lcd etc. If you ask the tech they can show you the graph that tells them how well the cables transmit at various frequencies (up to several ghz in these days of 1000mbps connections). That cheap but fancy continuity tester won't work if the problem is crosstalk etc.