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Could anyone please enlighten me if this is the case . Thank you in advance.
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Some suggest using a ups to hold up the base station and router during the power outage.
If you’re computer savvy you can try getting into the router web interface and setting the wifi channel to a fixed channel that is quiet and setting the IP address to a fixed value. Doing this removes the problem of the router wifi channel jumping around and the base station and cameras trying to track it as well as have the base station not working because the dhcp ip request fails since the router is slow to boot up.
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Some suggest using a ups to hold up the base station and router during the power outage.
If you’re computer savvy you can try getting into the router web interface and setting the wifi channel to a fixed channel that is quiet and setting the IP address to a fixed value. Doing this removes the problem of the router wifi channel jumping around and the base station and cameras trying to track it as well as have the base station not working because the dhcp ip request fails since the router is slow to boot up.
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Thank you so much for your reply , I’m going to go for your first idea with the smart plug ,it’s the easiest way for me.
Kind Regards Keith
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@Gear12 wrote:
Thank you so much for your reply , I’m going to go for your first idea with the smart plug ,it’s the easiest way for me.
@Dannybear's smartplug suggest is a good place to start.
One limitation is that the cameras can use a lot of power if they can't find the wifi signal. So you might want to add a UPS at some point to protect the router and base. Then the cameras would stay connected, and if the ISP internet connection remains up, you'd still get recordings during the power failure.
You can continue to use the smartplug (just connect it in to the UPS output).
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Thank you for your reply , the smart plug is the answer for me because I don’t have enough knowledge to set a UPS , I wouldn’t know where to start. I am willing to give it a try if you wouldn’t mind explaining what I need to do I would be really grateful, but please keep in mind that I’m a novice.
Kind Regards Keith
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A UPS is easier since all you do is plug in the UPS and then plug in the modem, router and base on the UPS. It's just a battery inline with the power.
A wireless switch needs to be connected to your WiFi to make it useful. Certainly not hard - just use the device's app to get things working.
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Hi Jguerdat
If that’s all it takes I’m sure it’s not beyond me, so I’ve had a quick look on eBay and there’s different powers and makes ,I suppose the more powerfull the ups is the longer the battery lasts in the event of a power out.
If so which brand would you recommend for me ,
Kind Regards Keith
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@Gear12 wrote:
I suppose the more powerfull the ups is the longer the battery lasts in the event of a power out.
Correct. How long are your typical power outages?
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@Gear12 wrote:
Hi Stephen thank you , yes between 20 to 30 minutes, we live in a small village and prone to regular outages we’ve had the odd one lasting an hour or two .
Then I suggest getting something with at least 425 VA capacity. That would easily power your router, a modem (if you have one) and your smarthub (assuming a 25 watt total load with a run time of at least an hour).
As far as brands go, to some degree this depends on your geography. Eaton is popular, as is APC. Personally I use CyberPower.
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Thank you so much for your assistance along with all other members, I am now in a better position to purchase all the equipment that I need for my cctv system.
Kind Regards Keith
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