PRO TIP : The magnetic ferrite on the power supply I used for my camera when wrapped near the video camera wire caused discoloration, horizontal lines etc. Unwrapped the e-tape and separated them and its fine now. Thanks for this the idea of EMF did it.
Hey bro this video was really helpful. I do camera installation also and sometimes when I troubleshoot previous runs that others do I get that same interference so what I normal do is rerun those cables in trunking and that normally fixes the issue
I have a cctv camera (1 of 6 on the system) that's fine during the day, but goes out every night. Goes black, and gets cross talk interfere from the other channels. Any suggestion what could be causing it or how to fix it?
I had interference on one of my outdoor cameras, I check the coax connection at the camera site all it was for me was the coax was bend to a point that cause the problem straighten or shorten coax if a bit to long. Problem solved.
Hi, great informational video! I have a question, would coax cable going to my modem/router interfere my video signal if it’s running together with the regular RCA BNC cable that comes with the standard security systems? I get a blurry signal that looks like a transparent playback over my video feed, it causes my security system motion detection to go off like crazy.
It shouldnt, but you might make sure the cables arent nearby any higher voltage cabling. Also, check the BNC connections and make sure they are on properly. Grounding issues on BNC connections can cause that kind of interference.
i used cheapest ethernet cable and wired them along side with power cable and even worse in this case , all the power cable is powering with high wattage factory machines…
All my cameras were working fine, then one day all five of them had horizontal lines running through them, hooked up another DVR and still had the issue, also hooked up different monitor with different line, could it be that all the cables are bad?
It would depend on what kind of cameras you have! Are they analog or IP? Have you tried taking the camera down and connecting to the recorder with a premade patch cable to see if that makes a difference?
@@NellysSecurity I left work where all my cameras and systems are, but I tried hooking up one camera at a time and I think it might be the power supply and the or the splitter to the cameras, when I directly plugged in one camera at a time the image got much better, I'll find out more tomorrow, and thanks for getting back so quickly, much appreciated.
PRO TIP : The magnetic ferrite on the power supply I used for my camera when wrapped near the video camera wire caused discoloration, horizontal lines etc. Unwrapped the e-tape and separated them and its fine now. Thanks for this the idea of EMF did it.
Excellent use you guys a lot over here in the UK
Hey bro this video was really helpful. I do camera installation also and sometimes when I troubleshoot previous runs that others do I get that same interference so what I normal do is rerun those cables in trunking and that normally fixes the issue
Great! Right when I need this video i got it ))) Thank you, guys!
I have a cctv camera (1 of 6 on the system) that's fine during the day, but goes out every night. Goes black, and gets cross talk interfere from the other channels.
Any suggestion what could be causing it or how to fix it?
I pronounce it like "Co-ak-shul". Btw love the bloopers at the end of the video, you almost had me laughing out loud!
By chance are you guys looking to have branch offices? If yes you guys should have one in guyana. I be more than happy to work with you guys
I had interference on one of my outdoor cameras, I check the coax connection at the camera site all it was for me was the coax was bend to a point that cause the problem straighten or shorten coax if a bit to long. Problem solved.
Hi, great informational video! I have a question, would coax cable going to my modem/router interfere my video signal if it’s running together with the regular RCA BNC cable that comes with the standard security systems? I get a blurry signal that looks like a transparent playback over my video feed, it causes my security system motion detection to go off like crazy.
It shouldnt, but you might make sure the cables arent nearby any higher voltage cabling. Also, check the BNC connections and make sure they are on properly. Grounding issues on BNC connections can cause that kind of interference.
@@NellysSecurity thanks a lot for your response I appreciate it!
@@NellysSecurity Grounding issue on bnc, means ?
Just curious, can properly connected BNC video connections be affected by touching against a metal housing?
i used cheapest ethernet cable and wired them along side with power cable and even worse in this case , all the power cable is powering with high wattage factory machines…
All my cameras were working fine, then one day all five of them had horizontal lines running through them, hooked up another DVR and still had the issue, also hooked up different monitor with different line, could it be that all the cables are bad?
It would depend on what kind of cameras you have! Are they analog or IP?
Have you tried taking the camera down and connecting to the recorder with a premade patch cable to see if that makes a difference?
@@NellysSecurity I left work where all my cameras and systems are, but I tried hooking up one camera at a time and I think it might be the power supply and the or the splitter to the cameras, when I directly plugged in one camera at a time the image got much better, I'll find out more tomorrow, and thanks for getting back so quickly, much appreciated.
Try adding a video balun
@@aizfusiontech7629 it ended up being a bad power supply cable, thanks for the heads up though, I'll keep it in mind for the next time.
Can a dvr reach a 300m camera?
If the camera is 300m away from the DVR, then you'll need something to supplement the distance aspect such as ubiquiti radios.
Co-Axle
Co-axe-seal
coixial