I'm interested in how you routed the cables. I did IT for a resort rental company and after the off ice was broken in to they had me add a 4 camera system. This was several years ago and the cameras were not of the quality these are. I had to route the cables along the top of walls at the ceiling okay for an office but I really don't want that in my home. Thanks for the video!
Great question. For wired cameras, running cables is the biggest challenge. For my setup, I am lucky to have a suspended ceiling and running the cables is very easy. I did drill a hole in the side of my house to run cables for the three cameras that are outside. They are all attached to my deck and I could run the cables under the deck with ease. Inside, the camera that is looking at my laser was simple by running the cable above the suspended ceiling.
Dear friend, thank you for your love and dedication, Uniarch will always accompany you to feel more beautiful life! ☺
Yes, it's a hassle to set up a cable, but it's more stable than wifi products.
And you don't have to worry about recharging the camera or replacing batteries.
I'm interested in how you routed the cables. I did IT for a resort rental company and after the off ice was broken in to they had me add a 4 camera system. This was several years ago and the cameras were not of the quality these are. I had to route the cables along the top of walls at the ceiling okay for an office but I really don't want that in my home. Thanks for the video!
Great question. For wired cameras, running cables is the biggest challenge. For my setup, I am lucky to have a suspended ceiling and running the cables is very easy. I did drill a hole in the side of my house to run cables for the three cameras that are outside. They are all attached to my deck and I could run the cables under the deck with ease. Inside, the camera that is looking at my laser was simple by running the cable above the suspended ceiling.