$45 is dirt cheap... Wish our guy was that cheap.My builder and his wiring contractor wanted $300 for security prewires. Only $45 for network prewires. Guess which I got...lol. Only regret is not getting them everywhere.
$45 is dirt cheap... Wish our guy was that cheap.My builder and his wiring contractor wanted $300 for security prewires. Only $45 for network prewires. Guess which I got...lol. Only regret is not getting them everywhere.
Do you know where in the house you want all the alarm, camera, network, and other wiring to terminate?WOW! Thanks alot for this! We plan on having a fairly large deck. From the sliding door on the first floor to pretty much the sliding door in the basement (right to the yellow/orage camera all the way on the left) I am not sure why they are having us meet with the low voltage guys before the electrical guys but we can keep modifying/adding until electrical inspection time. I was also planning on taking outdoor flood lights for the back/sides. Should I change that location based on the camera?
The company also does security system wiring. Full blown setup costs something like this (my friend is also building in this development and has been through this) Rough wiring instead of having them install the window/door sensors cost 1200 (this is what I will take). Is there something specific that I should request for this?
$45 is dirt cheap... Wish our guy was that cheap.
make sure you have adequate network wiring inside the house.Unfortunately they will not discount anything.
It's a trade off between ease of installation, functionality, weatherproofing, and aesthetics. It's best to keep walls, doors, windows, etc out of frame. For this reason moving a camera as little as a few inches can have a big impact. The selfie stick is a good idea to test things, but keep in mind it probably has a wider field of view than most of your cameras.I would consider mounting the cameras even lower a bit on the wall and not soffit in the front and back of the house.
Ideally I would try to have the cameras at 8 feet or lower ( 6-8 feet is often recommended here )
Try this when you go to the site, take the great images that Tangent laid out - print it out, go there with a friend - have him / her wear a baseball cap and hoodie and bring a camera and selfie type stick or similar and TEST those locations and have your friend walk around and see if you can catch their face when they do not look up at the cameras.
have your assistant walk around the house, have them walk to the door, windows, simulate breaking into your car, ...
Also plan to place 1-2x cameras somewhere to cover the street - so you can help ID any car which maybe used.
Do you know where in the house you want all the alarm, camera, network, and other wiring to terminate?
Is the basement going to be finished or unfinished? With the deck, the lower cameras may need to be in different locations. You'd also want to avoid staring at the deck posts. If the basement is unfinished you could do all of the low backyard cameras yourself later.
If you decide you want some overview cameras up in the 2nd story soffits that's a location that can be accessed after the house is fully built. In addition to getting better images, lower cameras are a lot harder to install after the fact. Different builders have different sequences they like, but often low voltage stuff is done after the electrical, hvac, and plumbing. It's easier to avoid obstacles and less likely the cabling is damaged. The pictures I posted are just a rough idea of locations that would probably work well.
How much of the house is going to be brick and how much vinyl siding?
make sure you have adequate network wiring inside the house.
trade offs abound. You may have some wiggle room on certain things. For example it might be possible for you to supply the cable and supply them with bundled cable that has multiple cat6 or multilple cat6 and rg6 (this would be more interior then security). You'd have to make sure you don't hold up the schedule though. You might be able to save if they pull some extra cables but don't terminate them all. The downside of things they don't terminate including alarm wiring is that it generally won't be tested and you won't know until later that the plumber cut half the wires or that 3 of them have screws in the cable. Lots of other things worth including too like wiring for 7.2 surround sound, which should be relatively low cost compared to some things.
Are you going to install the cameras yourself later, provide them with the cameras, or have them provide the cameras?
Alarm prices seem a bit high. Wiring for motion detectors and glass breaks as well as multiple keypads should be part of your system. Try to specify that all wires are home run either to the panel or a closet for a zone expander. Napco is a bit of a curious choice, they probably like it because the 4 zone expander built into the keypad lets them be lazier. That makes it harder to switch to a different panel in the future. I don't know if you have any flexibility there.
It's a trade off between ease of installation, functionality, weatherproofing, and aesthetics. It's best to keep walls, doors, windows, etc out of frame. For this reason moving a camera as little as a few inches can have a big impact. The selfie stick is a good idea to test things, but keep in mind it probably has a wider field of view than most of your cameras.
I don't think you need to keep all your cameras 6-8 feet up. I would try keep them less than about 12' above the ground or deck. The higher the camera, the farther away it needs to look.
Is the basement going to be finished or unfinished?
How much of the house is going to be brick and how much vinyl siding?
Run a network drop to each tv location and every bedroom / office. I doubt smurf runs will be any cheaper then running cable now.
Are you trying to say cat6 or bust or wifi will take over the world? Remember there's plenty of cable for sale that claims to be Cat-6 that doesn't even meet Cat-5e standards let alone Cat-6 standards. I mean if your budget's infinite and you aren't married, you could always run fiber everywhere. I for one am not in the wifi will take over the world camp.anyone recommending cat5e for future proof should not post anymore lol. seriously
I'd put the alarm system and camera wiring in the same location in the basement with everything else.The basement will be unfinished from the builder. However he is insulating the ceiling and sheetrocking it. The front will be brick other than the garage (he wanted 7k to do that area, we will do it after closing). The sides and back are vinyl.
Definitely plan on Ethernet at all tv/media locations, preferably more than one cable.I am going to get cabling for access points, 7.2 in the family room, speakers in kitchen/breakfast nook, and study. All cabling will be terminated in the basement.
Should the security cabling be terminated in the basement as well? Or should it come out to a wall by the front door? I also paid for a pvc conduit to run from the basement to the attic. Network drops are 120 a pop for cat5e and 160 for cat6. When I meet him, I am going to ask for pricing to run Smurf tube to each bedroom upstairs as well as the study and the family room.
I am going to install the cameras later, once we close on the house.
Are you trying to say cat6 or bust or wifi will take over the world? Remember there's plenty of cable for sale that claims to be Cat-6 that doesn't even meet Cat-5e standards let alone Cat-6 standards. I'm mean if your budget's infinite and you aren't married, you could always run fiber everywhere. I for one am not in the wifi will take over the world camp.
Even if it doesn't meet the Cat-6 spec, a big reason to choose Cat-6 is it's harder to screw up the actual cable run. The heavier wires and spline make it less likely someone pulls too hard on the cable or bends it too sharply. Cat-6 terminations otoh are more sensitive to screw ups.
testing takes very expensive equipment that generally costs more than $10k. Look up things like eye diagram and next if you're curious. There are some brands like belden that are kind of the gold standard. For a camera it really doesn't matter though beefier wires are nice for PoE, you're using well under 100mbps generally closer to 5mbps. It might matter for the links between multiple switches to to your nvr/pc. I don't want to get too off topic, there are other threads with more discussion. There's simply nobody who can enforce that cables that claim to be cat 6 actually are.No not bust the world and WiFi wont be doing that any time soon. A better topic to bring up is how could one person verify their cables are indeed Cat6? multi-meter or a cable tester? I would love to know actually even though my cat6 seems to be doing well for 4k resolution. Would be good for OP to know also even if he gets his supply through trusted source.
I just had my cat 6 installed and have started putting up my cameras today. IR seems to be reflecting off my test dome so it seems like they dont work that well at night. Perfect during the day.
Im worried 0% about facial identification. My experience is it is almost useless even when you get a clear face as the police pretty much dont do anything. Instead Im focused on motion detection and immediate notification. I want to get pinged anytime someone is walking around my house so I can make the decision to call the police or not.
As far as securing your house, kick ins are because the default for strike plates are 1/2 inch screws. Get those replaced by 3 inch screws into the studs which will drastically slow down a kick in. You can do the same on the hinges.
Some thieves around here have been using car jacks to spread the door frame which renders all locks useless in under a minute. They mainly have been doing it on the garage man door which often isnt alarmed. We use large barn door style pulls plus a 2x4 slid inside to block the garage man door. Inside the house you will probably want to mount floor bars at the same time you install your flooring. They stick up from the floor to block the door and they are relatively unobtrusive even when deployed.
Windows are trickier, you have a nice setup where the slope minimizes ground floor windows. We planted blackberry bushes with thorns in front of all windows and our front door has no glass or sidelights. For example your front door sidelights scream break me.
Also you should think about where to permanently mount a safe to the slab and a camera to monitor the safe.
We have a left front corner, right front corner, ring video doorbell and entry camera.
One in the garage to watch entry from the main garage door and entry into the house.
One on the right side of the house and one on the rear watching the stairs up to the deck and the doors. dont have one on the left side of the house as it is very steep with no windows