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bonkers

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  1. Controller is a Kalatel KTD404 and I believe the camera to be a Cyberdome II although I can not find a model # on it anywhere. The transformer that is connected to the jack is only 14volts if I remember correctly (not at my business right now) and not enough to power the camera, as I believe it is 24 volt.
  2. I am in not the business but do have some knowledge. Problem is that I obtained this unit second hand a few years ago and it only had the controller, the camera, and a plug in transformer that is connected to a phone style jack. The phone jack has the transformer connected to it and a two wire cable that appears to go to the camera (wires were cut), and a ethernet plug that goes to the controller. The camera has a video cable coming out it, a cable that appears to go to the phone jack, and another 2 wire cable coming out of it (which was also cut). I plugged in the transformer and connected the wire from the jack to the camera and the controller powers up, but the camera does not. Question is does the other 2 wire cable coming from the camera need to go to a power source? I bought it from someone I knew who lost their lease and in their haste to get everything out of the building before becoming locked out they had just cut the wires to remove the camera. I know these things are rather pricey and did not want to experiment with hooking up anything and risk shorting something out. I have searched the internet and could not obtain a wiring diagram and figured maybe someone here could possibly help me out. I do have a tranformer that is wired to a block type connector, that I use to run my other cameras with, that I believe could supply the power if that is in fact where the other wires lead to. I really do not want to short out this unit and need to be sure of what I am doing before proceeding with the installation. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
  3. Looking for someone in San Antonio to install or help me install a GE/Kalatel PTZ and controller.
  4. bonkers

    Help with remote viewing

    I am in a high volume bar business and it takes 8 hours to watch 8 hours of video . There is no way to see how much alcohol is being poured, how much money is being charged, how much change is given, etc. at 5 FPS. I don't have time to watch all the time, nor do I want to. It would be nice however to be able to see what is actually going on when I do view remotely. Inventory controls work great but when you have multiple employees on the same shift, working from the same inventory, you sometimes need to pinpoint where the problem is. If I was viewing for security purposes only 5 FPS would be more than sufficient, however that is not the case Thanks to all that have replied, I greatly appreciate you sharing your knowledge.
  5. bonkers

    Help with remote viewing

    Thank you for your help. So, I assume except for boasting my upload speed that's about as good as it gets. In my line of business I was really hoping for alot more IPS or FPS. Can never find the time to watch back video....
  6. bonkers

    Help with remote viewing

    Sorry about that, it's a Model CDR4170 made by Clover USA.
  7. New here and looking for some help with remote viewing. I have a Clover Standalone DVR set up at my business. I have it port forwarded through a router and am able to view remotely with the software it came with simply by punching in a user name , password, and the IP address of the network. Managed to get that done and am able to view remotely via my home computer. My problem is that when viewing I am only able to get 5 to 7 images per second and I really need to be able to view without the lapse or atleast alot more images per second. Can anyone tell me if this is a DVR issue, a bandwith issue, or what the problem may be? I have standard DSL at my business and 18mbps at home. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks...
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