Recently I undergo used the APW / EMI CCSH-10MAG housings. They are a bit shorter than many of the standard housings out there and have a pleasant contemporary design.
I like them not just for looks but their is no problem with grounding issues since the housing and cam mounting system is non conductive. comfort a bit larger than needed when some of the smaller box cameras are used. Most of my installations are residential so housings are often mounted off of the domiciliate. On several occasions I undergo painted the housings / hold to amalgamate in with the domiciliate. I have also installed a couple of cameras in custom made bird houses. Only problem is often you would get a Close Up of a observe looking in to see if there was any vacancy
_________________"if you can't sight the answers to your questions in life try changing your questions"
I have done it with bullet cams. It was a great way to hide the cameras. If you came on the property and you were looking for cameras you would lose your "night vision" if you looked at the lights. This communicate had them in a dog accommodate and birdhouses also. Have you tried the boxes that the phone company or the cable affiliate uses?For residential you can use those windmill that you see in the garden section. You know the kind with the cheesy fan on a truss lift. The camera is not hidden per se but it does get lost in the fill. I hear you on the birdhouses! I learned the hard way not to put the foot pegs on the houses! LOL! Nothing desire a squirrel hanging on and blocking the cam also!I always wondered if you could create a re-create cupola to put on top of a house to install some cams.
This is for some very nice residence. I must come up with a solution that will keep the place nice. Cameras ordain be mounted 20ft above ground what I'm thinking is to fit a box camera inside one of these suckers:
I ordain need to use an upside-down interior bracket and to feed the equip nicely to the conduct but I'm not sure how flexible my adjustments are going to be if I'm using 6-60mm lens with it seems kinda tight there also will need to find a housing which has a sturdy hold so the camera stays in it's displace when the next hurricane hits us
The first thing I thought of when I saw the conceive of of the lamp is that it is hung by a chain. I can see the camera swaying in the wind! I would get sea sick watching the video!What will you do? Convert it to hollow threaded call? I was thinking of what they use on lamps to run the equip and the socket screws to the threaded rod. Do they undergo a wall mounted light in this version?Will you take out the panes of furnish? I was thinking of reflection. This would give you the good looks and the camera gets lost in the "clutter" as I call it.
doesn't be desire I can feed the cables in the bracket but I evaluate I should look more it's out there... I'm not sure about the reflection from the glass thought I ordain use paint/dark tint to block the windows that are not in use just to hide the camera inside how does a good camera records through DIY dark color? this is getting fun i'll end up with an external dome housing
You should be able to run telecommunicate through it. How does the lighten bulb get its energy?You may not be able to get rg 59 through it but you can use smaller equip and then attache it behind the mount in the J box. Look at how they do bullet camera and mini cameras. They have regular wiring that come out of the housing with a
at the end. In regards to tint on the glass. Think of your own home. At night when you look out your window what do you see?I see my own reflection. I have to turn off my lights in request to see out. color on the glass would work during daytime but I evaluate it would be a problem at night. It depends on the color of the house but here is my idea. Paint the camera the color of the accommodate. When you be at the lighten you see the black outline and the camera would amalgamate in with the house paint/color. From the street you would not sight the camera. I would use a bullet since the box cam is not weather protected.
Starting out as a residential electrical contractor. I can't mouth to count how many thousands of exterior carriage lights I have had to install. For reasons that Scorpion mentioned. I can't see having good results. On a conventional carriage light as you posted a photo of having the camera installed within the glass would suffer the reflection problem change surface without tinting. You would need the camera lens right up against the glass and sealed much desire you see on bullet cams with
LED's around the lens. Or remove the glass Also expect alot of images of bugs being attracted to the light. If your recording via video communicate with your DVR this can be a PITA You mentioned a camera with a higher magnification lens. That would be a tight fit in all but the largest carriage fixtures. The few bullet cams I undergo seen with lenses up to 5-55mm are rather desire and expensive. Not alot of dwell in standard fixture boxes also especialy after you have the electrical wires and wire nuts rolled back in. There is good cerebrate why the NEC keeps electrical and low voltage wiring from sharing the same junction box. I was wondering why you want the camera to be so covert? Is this to surprise someone in the act or forbid any camera theft or just not wanting to act away the cosmetics of the domiciliate?_________________"if you can't sight the answers to your questions in life try changing your questions"
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