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I fight this NVR every year
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k_m_coors
Posted 3/19/2025 20:07 (#11154290 - in reply to #11152577)
Subject: RE: I fight this NVR every year


NW Ohio
DHCP in that menu looks like it would be a DHCP client, meaning it would get an ip address from your router for itself. Setting this to static is the best way to do what you are wanting.

Do the camera's connect through POE directly to your NVR box or do they connect through your Network with the rest of your devices on it? Only seeing one camera could be an IP address issue if they connect to your Network.

Sometimes setting static IP addresses in the range of what your router is set to hand out through DHCP can cause issues. For example, if your NVR box and cameras use the (static) addresses 192.168.1.15 through 192.168.1.23 but your DHCP server can hand out IP addresses from 192.168.1.10-192.168.1.100 that could cause two devices with the same ip address and then cause routing issues. If your camera's connect to your network and not directly to the NVR box, you should be able to log into your router and find a DHCP table. In that table you can see a list of device names and addresses. If you see 8 camera's on that list, you know they are all using DHCP and none of them should have a duplicate IP address as another device on your network. Problem may be in figuring out which device on the list is the cameras. This would be where I would start.

If it were wireless cameras to the NVR box, I would say maybe your Nano-Beams are causing enough interference with the signal.

I know nothing about NVR's but do know some about networking.
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