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Forum Discussion
hayhand
Jul 28, 2015Guide
Move cameras and VCR off main network
I have 3 wireless cameras connected to my home network that record to a LAN connected VCR. There is a LOT of traffic from these cameras and cause bandwidth issues when streaming video from the internet. I have a Netgear N600 router and wondering if I could set it up as an access point and connect my 3 wireless camers to it and the VCR to a LAN port on that router and that would remove the traffic from the network or is still going to flow back through my modem/router anyway? The modem/router is a DSL Q1000.
Richard
Welll it is time to close out this issue, so here is the answer....
It actually was a simplistic fix - just keep all the cameras and NVR (network video recorder) all on the same router. So I used a WMDR3700V2 router set as an AP then one LAN port went back to the modem/router, one port went to the NVR and then the wireless cameras were all attached to that same router. Now all the traffice stayed on that router yet I could get to all the devices from anywhere on the house LAN. The problem before was that I had the NVR at the other end of the house on the LAN and so all the camera traffice passed through the modem/router and reduced the BW for other competing devices. Some times a problem that seems complex and difficult turns out to be easy. Thanks for all your comments......
Richard
10 Replies
- netwrksMaster
I don't have cameras. But, I'm curious, do your cameras need to talk to the outside world?
- Babylon5NETGEAR Employee Retired
I think hayhand has the right idea, however it’s not a case of taking the cameras off the network, but segmenting the LAN using the switch ports of the N600 (which model?). This would have the effect of keeping all point to point network traffic between recorder and cameras away from PC – Internet traffic.
I have eight IP cameras currently active with about 10 switches distributed around the house, camera traffic is kept away from other areas quite well.
- hayhandGuide
Andy,
Thank you for your response. My first setup was to make a separate LAN using just the Netgear router but connecting it via the WAN port back to the main modem/router. That gave me access to the rest of the network and the internet and kept the cameras on their own LAN. Of course I could get out of the camera LAN but could not get into it from the outside world. I did want to access the VCR from outside but that appears to be a problem at this point. The N600 is a WNDR3700V4 model. I will probably keep the setup the way it is but I am going to re-config one camera and the VCR and change the router so it is an access point and then watch the activity both on that router and back on the Q1000 modem/router (and attached switches) to see where the majority of the LAN activity occurs.
Richard
- Babylon5NETGEAR Employee Retired
OK, the point about using network switches, and the router has a four port switch, is that point to point traffic is directed. So for example if a DVR is connected to port 1, and a camera to port 2, then the point to point traffic that the camera sends to the DVR will not be seen at ports 3 and 4.