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Custom Installers' Lounge Forum - View Post
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The following page was printed from RemoteCentral.com:
| Topic: | IP Camera reccomendation This thread has 12 replies. Displaying all posts. |
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| Post 1 made on Tuesday January 25, 2011 at 08:41 |
Jimmy Bellagio Advanced Member |
Joined: Posts: | January 2008 854 |
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Anyone know if a suitable product exists where someone could wire a camera directly to their TV set just for viewing purpose? Would be great to also have IP control, but no DVR is needed and customer just wants to keep an eye on reception when he is in the back working in the office. Wants to use his Plasma, not the computer in most cases.
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James S. Bellagio |
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| Post 2 made on Tuesday January 25, 2011 at 09:17 |
Rob Grabon Founding Member |
Joined: Posts: | November 2001 1,392 |
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Panasonic IP cameras have video and audio line outs, IP control, and SD card recording.
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Technology is cheap, Time is expensive. |
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| Post 3 made on Tuesday January 25, 2011 at 09:32 |
Fred Harding Super Member |
Joined: Posts: | October 2001 3,430 |
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What he said.
Not all have that feature, but some do.
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On the West Coast of Wisconsin |
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| Post 4 made on Tuesday January 25, 2011 at 09:35 |
Thanks for sharing. Can you list some models that has these kind of features? Or do all of them have? On January 25, 2011 at 09:17, Rob Grabon said...
Panasonic IP cameras have video and audio line outs, IP control, and SD card recording.
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| Post 5 made on Tuesday January 25, 2011 at 09:38 |
Royd Hanson Long Time Member |
Joined: Posts: | September 2008 24 |
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Panasonic BLC-210A IP camera can be viewed/controlled directly by Panasonic G25 and up model TV's. (Right from the TV remote) As long as both are on the same network.
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| Post 6 made on Tuesday January 25, 2011 at 09:39 |
edizzle Loyal Member |
Joined: Posts: | March 2005 5,916 |
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you dont need an ip camera to wire directly to tv. in fact you would save considerable money by using standard composite video camera wired directly to tv. if you want an ip camera obviously the model listed above gives both standard outputs and ip which sounds good or if he has network enabled TV you could research what the strea,ing capability of the set is and if there is any way to stream the feed from camera to TV via ip, maybe dlna.
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I love supporting product that supports me! |
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| Post 7 made on Tuesday January 25, 2011 at 10:38 |
Active Member |
Joined: Posts: | November 2009 610 |
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| Post 8 made on Tuesday January 25, 2011 at 10:47 |
vbova27 Super Member |
Joined: Posts: | July 2006 2,987 |
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I don't think the BLC-210A has an audio and video out. While it is true that you can view it with a Viera Plasma via VieraLink, the process is QUITE annoying. First and foremost, the screen goes into screensaver mode within a few minutes and there is no way to adjust this as far as I know (feel free if someone knows otherwise). But I don't think there is any way to wire this directly to a TV .
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| Post 9 made on Tuesday January 25, 2011 at 11:09 |
tgrugett Select Member |
Joined: Posts: | August 2004 1,847 |
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On January 25, 2011 at 08:41, Jimmy Bellagio said...
Anyone know if a suitable product exists where someone could wire a camera directly to their TV set just for viewing purpose? Would be great to also have IP control, but no DVR is needed and customer just wants to keep an eye on reception when he is in the back working in the office. Wants to use his Plasma, not the computer in most cases You need to contend with the crossover issue and static IPs if you are going to hook up directly to the set. Usually one would have them both on an LAN network.
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| OP | Post 10 made on Tuesday January 25, 2011 at 11:41 |
Jimmy Bellagio Advanced Member |
Joined: Posts: | January 2008 854 |
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Thanks for the input, but let me give some more info - the customer wants a camera that he can watch on his TV. He already has an OLDER LG Plasma. He needs to be able to watch his reception area on his TV 85% of the time. The other 15% of the time it would be best for him to access over a laptop. He does not want a DVR as he is not interested in recording video. This is just to keep an eye on things. Is there a simple way to do this without going through the whole DVR thing?
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James S. Bellagio |
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| Post 11 made on Tuesday January 25, 2011 at 12:15 |
2nd rick Super Member |
Joined: Posts: | August 2002 4,521 |
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Channel Vision's 6521 (vandal-proof dome w/ IR) and 6522 (bullet cam w/ IR) are 1600x1200 (aka 2 megapixel) IP cameras with audio out as well as composite/baseband out to go to a local monitor and/or an analog input on a DVR. [Link: channelvision.com][Link: channelvision.com]
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Rick Murphy Troy, MI |
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| Post 12 made on Tuesday January 25, 2011 at 12:23 |
brandenpro Select Member |
Joined: Posts: | May 2005 1,651 |
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Panasonic also has a TV interface box for the cameras.
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| Post 13 made on Tuesday January 25, 2011 at 18:00 |
Fred Harding Super Member |
Joined: Posts: | October 2001 3,430 |
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Brandenpro: Panasonic has retired that box. NLA
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On the West Coast of Wisconsin |
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