- Jul 19, 2016
- 12
- 7
I have been asked to 'look at' a newly installed system that will not work reliably. It consists of 12 (Uniview) wireless 4Mpixel cameras, talking back to a single 2.4G (Engenius) Access point, then onwards to a Uniview NVR. The network has a BT Hub as the router and an onward FTTC Internet connection (showing speeds of around 16/2 at most). There are also half a dozen bits of office PCs, printers etc all on the same network. I fully realise the network load here is far from ideal - but is the design poor to the point of being doomed, or can something be salvaged? The issue I am seeing is that most of the cameras connect to the AP fine, with signals strengths in the -50s and low -60s, but they refuse to stream to the NVR, and (perhaps significantly) I cannot consistently access the cameras web interface. The keyword here is 'consistent' - it's up and down all over the place. I have temporarily replaced the AP with a more modern Ubiquiti unit, and tested the cabling (AP to switch, router etc). The system is rural with no other wifi nearby. If all the cameras were attempting to stream at the same time, I'd be happy to say the issue was simply not enough wireless bandwidth, but even before I adopt the cameras to the NVR things arent stable (ie can't access the cameras UI). If I bring cameras back to the desk and connect via Ethernet, they are fine. I can normally get 3 or 4 cams working for a while - but minutes not hours. I didn't specify the initially install (and would never specify wireless like this) but has the customer now wasted their cash? Is it 'wired or die' from this point? All or any advice is very welcome here.