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Scalable Video (90 Channels) NVR

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Bob La Londe

Jan 1, 1970
0
Recommendation? Everything I am finding really quick maxes at 32 channels.
I can tell the customer that scalability requires adding units I guess...

Also, I am looking at bandwidth usage for MP+ IP cameras and the data load
is staggering. I am thinking secondary network with a router connecting it
to the primary network is necessary if you have more than a few cameras.
 
B

Bob La Londe

Jan 1, 1970
0
Bob La Londe said:
Recommendation? Everything I am finding really quick maxes at 32
channels. I can tell the customer that scalability requires adding units I
guess...

Also, I am looking at bandwidth usage for MP+ IP cameras and the data load
is staggering. I am thinking secondary network with a router connecting
it to the primary network is necessary if you have more than a few
cameras.

The customer specified:

6 cameras to start
Equivalent of 2MP resolution view and record
30 days minimum storage
Scalable to maintain specs up to 90 channels.

They did not specify IP or NVR, but I don't know any way to do it without
going that way and sticking strictly with H.264 and keeping it down around 5
frames. I am still limited to telling them to buy more NVRs for each 32
channel block.

Even with H.264 at 5 frames we are looking at 92.7 Mbps plus overhead by the
time they meet full scale. If they demand higher frame rates on motion it
goes through the roof.
 
B

Bob La Londe

Jan 1, 1970
0
RockyTSquirrel said:
"Bob La Londe" wrote in message


The customer specified:

6 cameras to start
Equivalent of 2MP resolution view and record
30 days minimum storage
Scalable to maintain specs up to 90 channels.

They did not specify IP or NVR, but I don't know any way to do it without
going that way and sticking strictly with H.264 and keeping it down around
5
frames. I am still limited to telling them to buy more NVRs for each 32
channel block.

Even with H.264 at 5 frames we are looking at 92.7 Mbps plus overhead by
the
time they meet full scale. If they demand higher frame rates on motion it
goes through the roof.



Bob if their going to start with 6 cameras, it sounds like their pulling
your chain.....

They already have an analog / dvr system in place Looked like a typical 16
camera installation. Their goal is to use this new system to fill some
holes and take care of immediate problem areas. Then to phase out the old
system they have in place that they do not like, and then to add on to
finish their needs. They already have a budget for the immediate project.

In addition I have seen displays from two other facilities they have that
have recently been upgraded similar systems. The amounts are such that they
are required to go out to bid by law.

I'm a Johnny come lately to the process just having been invited to the
table, but I could use the business so I am going to chase it. They aren't
yanking my chain. They are upgrading and filling holes in a progressive
manner. Their real goal is about 90 cameras at this particular facility.
The two smaller facilities that they did first looked to have 18 and 30
cameras respectively based on the connection list I saw.
 
G

G. Morgan

Jan 1, 1970
0
Bob said:
The customer specified:

6 cameras to start
Equivalent of 2MP resolution view and record
30 days minimum storage
Scalable to maintain specs up to 90 channels.

They did not specify IP or NVR, but I don't know any way to do it without
going that way and sticking strictly with H.264 and keeping it down around 5
frames. I am still limited to telling them to buy more NVRs for each 32
channel block.

Even with H.264 at 5 frames we are looking at 92.7 Mbps plus overhead by the
time they meet full scale. If they demand higher frame rates on motion it
goes through the roof.

May want to consider cloud storage like Amazon S3. That is going to be
terabytes of data for 30 days storage.
 
B

Bob La Londe

Jan 1, 1970
0
G. Morgan said:
May want to consider cloud storage like Amazon S3. That is going to be
terabytes of data for 30 days storage.

Looking at a minimum of 9 terabytes when fully expanded. Found a unit
capable of 18 or 9 with raid. Available to start with 3 and all drives are
hot swappable. Comes with 8 licenses and capable of 128. Set it up with
its own switch and good to go. Can process upto 280 Mps internally so it
can handle the load. Need to plan all 10/100/1000 hardware though.
 
G

G. Morgan

Jan 1, 1970
0
Bob said:
Looking at a minimum of 9 terabytes when fully expanded. Found a unit
capable of 18 or 9 with raid. Available to start with 3 and all drives are
hot swappable.

You can start with 3 drives? Is this a RAID5 array?

What about backups and redundancy? Have you considered cloud storage at
all? You could set the local head-end to keep only 24-48 hours on-site
(dramatically reducing number of disks) and unlimited archives on a
cloud server(s). You may find it's much cheaper and reliable to use a
connected "Simple Storage Service".

Standard Storage Reduced Redundancy Storage
First 1 TB / month $0.125 per GB $0.093 per GB
Next 49 TB / month $0.110 per GB $0.083 per GB
Next 450 TB / month $0.095 per GB $0.073 per GB
Next 500 TB / month $0.090 per GB $0.063 per GB
Next 4000 TB / month $0.080 per GB $0.053 per GB
Over 5000 TB / month $0.055 per GB $0.037 per GB

http://aws.amazon.com/s3/#pricing
Comes with 8 licenses and capable of 128.

License for what, users or cameras?
Set it up with
its own switch and good to go. Can process upto 280 Mps internally so it
can handle the load. Need to plan all 10/100/1000 hardware though.

Definitely. CAT6 or are you going to try with CAT5?
 
B

Bob La Londe

Jan 1, 1970
0
G. Morgan said:
You can start with 3 drives? Is this a RAID5 array?

3 Terrabytes. I was talking about terabytes.
What about backups and redundancy? Have you considered cloud storage at
all? You could set the local head-end to keep only 24-48 hours on-site
(dramatically reducing number of disks) and unlimited archives on a
cloud server(s).

If the customer wants to stream off site that is their choice. They didn't
ask for that, and seemed strongly adverse to adding to their recurring
costs.

You may find it's much cheaper and reliable to use a
connected "Simple Storage Service".

Uh-huh. Like a simple stack connected to the SCSI port. Again... I am
bidding this against other companies so up sells have to come later.
Standard Storage Reduced Redundancy Storage
First 1 TB / month $0.125 per GB $0.093 per GB
Next 49 TB / month $0.110 per GB $0.083 per GB
Next 450 TB / month $0.095 per GB $0.073 per GB
Next 500 TB / month $0.090 per GB $0.063 per GB
Next 4000 TB / month $0.080 per GB $0.053 per GB
Over 5000 TB / month $0.055 per GB $0.037 per GB

http://aws.amazon.com/s3/#pricing

Plus account fee.
License for what, users or cameras?

IP cameras. Users are unlimited.
Definitely. CAT6 or are you going to try with CAT5?

Have you actually looked up Cat 6? From what I have been able to find Cat 6
is just Cat 5e which is certified to actually meet Cat 5e standards. There
is actually a difference between 5 and 5e however.

So, anyway... I have to meet the spec they provided which is not to
redesign the spec and let the other bidders price off my work.
 
G

G. Morgan

Jan 1, 1970
0
Bob said:
So, anyway... I have to meet the spec they provided which is not to
redesign the spec and let the other bidders price off my work.

Gotcha. You can call Pelco and they will build you a NAS solution to
specs. I've put in some of their rack-mounted units that hold 18 drives
(or 20, forgot) that are easily scalable as the project grows. The one
at a certain federal facility has over a dozen of such HDD racks.

You'll just need to keep an eye bandwidth as you know. I think you're
right about keeping the CCTV network separate from their LAN, the IT
department is only going to give you so much bandwidth if they want to
bridge the two. Let them control their allotted cap to it's gateway,
and roll your own network for the cameras. That will keep the IT guys
from messing around with it hopefully. I would make sure to use a
totally different color for the cables so it's clear to everyone which
network is which.
 
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