Been reading up on setting up an NVR at the house. Seems most of my questions brought me to threads on this forum, so decided to join in. Saw that a lot of folks look for used PCs and put large disk drives in them. Also saw that some have used small form factor PCs with SSDs with varying success.
I have a small area on a book case next to the loft computer desk that I put my Synology router and NAS and I've decided to go the SFF route. I did look into finding a used PC. I figured my time is also worth something and I'd rather not spend time cleaning up an old PC and dealing with possible old-stuff-failures. And I'd rather put a small brick PC tucked next to my router and not be an eye sore to the wife.
I've played with the Synology Surveillance station (2x default licenses) with my existing cameras and it works well, but dang their additional licenses are expensive. I guess monitor traffic goes through their servers or something and they need to get paid for that. I figure I'll join the Blue Iris crowd. I'm going to store video to DAS and wall off the cameras from my Synology NAS and other 1st class devices on my LAN.
Planning to implement the following:
Beelink EQi12 24GB / 500GB / i5-12450H ($429) (Has dual M.2 slots)
WD Black 2TB SN770 SSD ($119) in second M.2 slot
Blue Iris ($63)
NVR total: $611
I'll use 3 of my existing cameras from Foscam (HT2, VP5) and get a Reolink PTZ. I want to try the Reolink Mixtrack WiFi ($136) with the spot lights for the front driveway area.
I haven't exposed the Foscam cameras to the harsh outdoors, but so far I like them. I don't have to create any Foscam accounts to get them working. I am assuming the same for Reolink. The Foscam cameras worked well with connecting to BI without issues. PTZ worked well. I'll probably add two cameras in the chicken coop later for a total of 6 cameras. But 4 to start.
Based on my calculations, I'll have about an average of 4MP cameras, 15FPS, and 5 days of retention. With 6 cameras I would need about 1.3TB of storage.
I'll post back after I get this setup and hopefully will have a successful report. Anxious to see how the Beelink and SSD hold up. My experience with outdoor cameras tells me the cameras, taking the sun and rain, will be the weakest link.
I have a small area on a book case next to the loft computer desk that I put my Synology router and NAS and I've decided to go the SFF route. I did look into finding a used PC. I figured my time is also worth something and I'd rather not spend time cleaning up an old PC and dealing with possible old-stuff-failures. And I'd rather put a small brick PC tucked next to my router and not be an eye sore to the wife.
I've played with the Synology Surveillance station (2x default licenses) with my existing cameras and it works well, but dang their additional licenses are expensive. I guess monitor traffic goes through their servers or something and they need to get paid for that. I figure I'll join the Blue Iris crowd. I'm going to store video to DAS and wall off the cameras from my Synology NAS and other 1st class devices on my LAN.
Planning to implement the following:
Beelink EQi12 24GB / 500GB / i5-12450H ($429) (Has dual M.2 slots)
WD Black 2TB SN770 SSD ($119) in second M.2 slot
Blue Iris ($63)
NVR total: $611
I'll use 3 of my existing cameras from Foscam (HT2, VP5) and get a Reolink PTZ. I want to try the Reolink Mixtrack WiFi ($136) with the spot lights for the front driveway area.
I haven't exposed the Foscam cameras to the harsh outdoors, but so far I like them. I don't have to create any Foscam accounts to get them working. I am assuming the same for Reolink. The Foscam cameras worked well with connecting to BI without issues. PTZ worked well. I'll probably add two cameras in the chicken coop later for a total of 6 cameras. But 4 to start.
Based on my calculations, I'll have about an average of 4MP cameras, 15FPS, and 5 days of retention. With 6 cameras I would need about 1.3TB of storage.
I'll post back after I get this setup and hopefully will have a successful report. Anxious to see how the Beelink and SSD hold up. My experience with outdoor cameras tells me the cameras, taking the sun and rain, will be the weakest link.