If you have a known good spare camera, put it on that cable run to give you more info to work with.
Unfortunately I only have the one camera, it's my first one. Would be nice if I had another one to test and that would answer my question for good.
If you have a known good spare camera, put it on that cable run to give you more info to work with.
So I just plugged in an android box onto the 50 foot cable on the PoE switch and pinged it, 0% loss
Bingo. Have you done a hard camera reset yet? Remove power from camera, Press internal camera reset button and hold while reapplying power. Release reset button 10-15 seconds after applying power. You'll have to enter new user/pass and the ip will revert to factory settings.
Did you upgrade the firmware on this camera, or is it still the shipped version?
I will try to do the reset as you suggested. I did press on the reset for 10 seconds while the camera was on before but I did not try the method where you hold the button as you apply the power. I did upgrade the firmware to the latest version V2.800.0000008.0.R.190619. I'll report back.
If the problem still exists after the hard reset, you may need to downgrade the firmware back to the shipped version. In which case you'll need to do another hard reset after you reinstall the old firmware.
When you did the hard reset did it revert all the camera settings back to default and asked you to setup a new password?
As a test try placing the Poe switch closer to the cam. So 50ft cable -> Poe switch -> patch cable -> cam
It sounds like the driving end is unable to properly drive the cable at that length. I had something similar when I wired up my sons room. Used around 20m of cable and although this was just a data point some reported that it was rubbish. What would happen for me is initially it would be fine and then slowly get worse and worse. I like you did loads of testing and eventually worked out that it was the 3Com gigabit switch. It wasn’t able to drive/power the connections at that length. Replaced it with a Dell managed gigabit switch and everything has been fine since.
Yes it reset everything and I had to re-initialize the camera.
Thanks, I definitely spent the time testing each individual component of my setup. I spoke with Andy and he said it could be the circuit board within the camera and he will test it once I send it back. I agree it’s either the circuit board as it’s unable to drive the information back to my switch or it may also be a soldering point on the board defective component or even the ethernet port on the camera itself as they’re not always made of the best materials.. These things can happen unfortunately. As another precaution I’ll be replacing the ends of my cat6 cable in the next few days with some higher quality cat6 connectors to help minimize interference. I’m fairly confident at this point that the issue will be resolved with the replacement camera. Once I test the new cam I’ll have to provide you guys with an update.
What happened with this?