Nice unit also the power port is on the back of sender and receiver because Ethernet can only transfer power for a 100m before needing to get power boosters or use separate plugs
The connection at the back, although it uses a rj45 connection, it's not Ethernet standards so the 100m rule isn't applicable here. Also, In terms of power upto 100m of cable, hikvision can send power and data upto 300m when set to extend mode.
Do you offer an IP enabled range? These units all seem to require direct copper connection (from Hub to TV) and on some sites this isn't an option. We have a number sites that have fibre optic between buildings with separate vlans for CCTV streams
Question My hikvision nvr says I am out of storage I rested my HDD and it still says that, hard drive is 2 tb of storage any idea? And I need one of those!
@@DVSLTD when I format it says hard drive is normal when I go to playback it says hard drive not formatted, So I go and check the hard drive status and it says it’s broken, Rebooting the system will make me re format the hard drive
@@owolabitaofeeqowodunni8609 Lol, I watched it to the end. They never showed how to control the CCTV remotely, only how to control the matrix switcher.
It's not ip so it won't work over WiFi. You cant plug the transmitter into your router and connect the receiver into a switch port. It's proprietary. Although it's an RJ45 cable it's not IP. The 2 are not the same. Think of it like using cat5e or cat6 cable with baluns instead of coax for analogue CCTV
That’s great , the same as anything in life there is cheap and then pro professional , you are not in this industry I presume so are able to use what you can / need
This is sadly true for all HDMI over Cat/Fibre/IP distribution. The link nearly always costs more than the source and display at each end. It does my head in.