Yes that's the one, you'll need to add a drive, 1TB with two cameras should be sufficient for 7 days recording. It should be able to cope with 4-5 cameras, but you'll need additional licenses
So far as cameras, provided they support ONVIF, they should work. I have been buying used Hikvision...
wow using "flash" that must be old!.
As mentioned before, I would consider replacing the NVR, with a used DS120J, and a 1TB drive. it comes with Synology Surveillance station and 2 camera licences, shouldn't cost more than $150. The Mac client works great on M2 and Intel Macs, has a iOS...
Good to hear the RT2600 and RT6600 connected, I've been really impressed with Synology so far, way better than the QNAP I had.
Are also able to connect your Mac to the NVR, as they are all on the same network now?
It seems "odd" that you're able connect to a camera via IP camera Viewer 2...
You could just try the Rt2600 in the garage and see if it will connect to the rt 6600 you don’t actually need to have the cameras connected.
I think you’ll need to reset the Rt2600 first for the rt6600 to see it as an access point
You may be able to access the RTSP streams from the camera, perhaps in VLC, but I would do as I suggested so you can use the full functionality of the PVR
If the cameras a need POE, the RT2600 will NOT provide it, so you will need a POE injector or a POE Switch, probably about the same cost...
sorry I should have said a POE switch, something like
https://www.amazon.co.uk/TP-Link-TL-SG1005P-Ethernet-Configuration-Required/dp/B0769C24T1/ref=sr_1_3?crid=FFVAFLZQKLA4&keywords=poe+switch+4+port&qid=1701537547&sprefix=POE+witch%2Caps%2C90&sr=8-3
Great if you have an old Synology Router...
As you have a Synology RT6600 router how about.
1. Add a Synology wrx560 (or the older MR2200 ac) access point to the garage and a POE hub.
2. wirelessly connect the access point to your RT6600 (easy in the SRM software interface)
3. Move the NVR to the house.
The load of the cameras on...
Link to my post from several years ago.
https://ipcamtalk.com/threads/camera-hidden-in-spike-light.47893/
The camera is still going strong, but I'm now using a Synology NAS (DVA1622) and surveillance Station for LPR (ANPR)
I had a similar incident a couple of years ago, the police did pursue the driver for failing to stop, he was fined £600 plus 6 points on his licence. (12 points = Ban).
https://ipcamtalk.com/threads/delivery-guy-hits-car-and-drives-off-u-k.42120/
Image quality is excellent. It looks like a busy junction with the chippy.
Not that it helps much but... he shouldn't have been reversing into a no entry street and the Peugeot's parked illegally anyway. Still helpful that you can give the owner the footage, good spot!
Nasty prang with an E-scooter caught on my CCTV this morning. (cropped frame).
I was able to spot the rider on another camera, and was able to track the head, looks like a woman to me.
The camera was fairly easy to pull apart, the only hassle, was cutting and rejoining the pigtail as it has to go through the gland on base of the the lamp. (Solder and shrink wrap).
I also replaced the lens with a 19mm to make the framing much tighter. I was expecting more issues with the...
Another solution for hiding cameras, I took a Hikvision bullet camera, removed it from its casing and fitted it in to a "spike light".
I have a couple of real spike lights illuminating a tree, so it's hard to spot another one pointing slightly the wrong way...
A beta has been released, which runs under Docker, (a virtualised environment) I have it working on OSXs and it looks promising. Ultimately I would like to get it running on Docker on my Synology NAS but have failed so far - probably as I don't know what I'm doing!
Getting Started with...