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Yes but you will need power. Connect the single cable from the NVR to a 5 port PoE switch then connect the two cameras to that switch also.I have a DS-7608NI-I2-8P.
I only have 1 cable at the top of the garden and I need to install a second 4K camera from the same cable. Both cameras do not have sound built in.
Is this possible?
Thanks
1 - You could try that but on the latest firmware I had an issue when I did, which is what I would normally do - switching off the unneeded PoE on the channel that the switch was connected to removed the channel completely. I'd never had that issue previously - it used to be possible to simply switch off PoE leaving the channel available.Q.1 Do I need to switch off the PoE on that 1 port on the NVR?
Q.2 Is the NVR capable of seeing both cameras from the 1 port?
Q3. So I need to put the PoE switch at the 2 camera end of the Cat6?
Using the existing link to an NVR PoE port and configuring them on the same network is no issue with regard to stability. I've done this a number of times and even with four 4K cameras there was no issue. The benefit is that it keeps the system the same in that only the NVR is exposed directly to the internet and keeps all the camera traffic segregated and off the LAN.I think I would re-configure to add the cameras to your LAN, then manually add them to the NVR via their LAN IP addresses - I suspect that long-term this would be most stable.
1 camera but I need to connect 2 through 1 cable. I was thinking if I can cut power from the port at the nvr end then all I need is a 12V PSU at the other end to power both cameras.What do you actually have at the end of your garden please?
I was imagining a single camera on a pole.
Cutting cores is drastic action, and should be unnecessary.
POE supplies use a kind of handshake i.e. the device sending POE power checks whether there is a device connected that can accept POE power, if there is only then will it send the power.
No harm at all - the port on the NVR will simply not output 48V on that port - I’ve done several that way. The cable from the NVR will go to the single uplink port on the switch.I'm totally new to connecting cameras in this way.
So no harm will come to the NVR outputting 48V into the PoE switch that is also outputting 48 Volts. Is this correct?
Can you recommend a cheap PoE switch that will work.
Thanks
No harm at all - the port on the NVR will simply not output 48V on that port - I’ve done several that way. The cable from the NVR will go to the single uplink port on the switch.
Amazon probably your best bet. I’d be beware of anything cheap - always use a well known brand for peace of mind. TP Link do a 5 port (4 ports plus uplink) one that’s under £30. Just search “5 port PoE” on there and it coThank you.
Last question. Does it have to be a Gigabit switch or will 100Mb and will a simple unmanged switch do?No harm at all - the port on the NVR will simply not output 48V on that port - I’ve done several that way. The cable from the NVR will go to the single uplink port on the switch.
Amazon probably your best bet. I’d be beware of anything cheap - always use a well known brand for peace of mind. TP Link do a 5 port (4 ports plus uplink) one that’s under £30. Just search “5 port PoE” on there and it comes up