Setting up the cameras with a connection to the router on site.
Use this setup if your cameras are connected to your onsite router.
If you plan on setting up an isolated network, without a connection to the router on site and your cameras are connected to the computer via a switch, use the setup guide at the end of the article.
The easiest way to get the PTZOptics unit connected to your network is to connect the camera to your wireless router and then enter the command to let the camera find the IP address assigned by the router. This adds it to your network's range with minimal effort.
Please Note: This will only work for the cameras that have an IR remote control. ZCams setup is not supported.
- Connect your camera to your wireless router, or to a switch connected to the wireless router.
- Press # > * > 4 in sequence using the supplied IR remote control.
Please Note: The router should be the device supplying internet to your site.This will place the camera into DHCP mode. If you know that this camera is connected to a DHCP router, the camera will find it's own DHCP address. The camera will reboot after receiving this command.
- Press # > * > 4 in sequence using the supplied IR remote control.
- Once the camera has rebooted, it should have the correct IP address to access it on your network. To find out what that IP address is, connect a monitor or display to the HDMI output of the camera to see the live image.
- Press this * > # > 4 in sequence to see the current IP address is (below). If you can't get a live image, try changing the rotary dial on the back of the camera to setting B and then reboot the camera.
- Press * > # > 4 again.
- Once this is done, if the IP address is 192.168.100.88, either the camera is not connected to your router, or the router is not capable of changing the IP address using DHCP, proceed to the next step.
- If you get a different IP address, that is most likely the correct IP address for your network. Type it into a browser address bar. You should be prompted for a username and password (both: admin), and now your camera is set up to be on your network! You can pull this feed into numerous other places including using our free camera control app to view and control the cameras.
Setting up the cameras on an isolated network, without a connection to the router on site.
Using this method, you can keep the ethernet video traffic isolated to a local network you have just for AV gear. This is by far the easiest method for setting up the cameras and you don't technically need a computer on the network to do this. If you connect all your cameras to a network switch and then use this IR command:
- Pound (#), Star (*), Pound (#), One (1) - Sets IP address to be 192.168.100.81
- Pound (#), Star (*), Pound (#), One (1) - Sets IP address to be 192.168.100.82
- Pound (#), Star (*), Pound (#), One (1) - Sets IP address to be 192.168.100.83
- Pound (#), Star (*), Pound (#), Four (4) - Sets IP address to be 192.168.100.84
- Pound (#), Star (*), Pound (#), Five (5) - Sets IP address to be 192.168.100.85
- Pound (#), Star (*), Pound (#), Six (6) - Sets IP address to be 192.168.100.86
- Pound (#), Star (*), Pound (#), Seven (7) - Sets IP address to be 192.168.100.87
- Pound (#), Star (*), Pound (#), Eight (8) - Sets IP address to be 192.168.100.88 (This is also the default IP address of the cams)
- Pound (#), Star (*), Pound (#), Nine (9) - Sets IP address to be 192.168.100.89
This Allows the cameras to each have their own IP address within the 192.168.100.xxx IP range. Set your other hardware (joysticks or computers) to be in that same range, and everything will be able to talk to each other. You can pull the IP feeds into software on a computer set to the same IP range, or control the cameras from that same computer or a joystick hooked up to that isolated network.
https://kb.netgear.com/27476/How-do-I-set-a-static-IP-address-in-Windows