ip9000a

James Sentman james at sentman.com
Sun Oct 6 10:29:23 EDT 2013


On Oct 6, 2013, at 9:22 AM, Thomas Henry <tjhjr at mac.com> wrote:

> I just picked up an IP9000a, and have been testing it with a few cameras I currently have. I was able to get a pinhole camera and the X10 Sentinel to appear in Video Pitcher, and then in XTension.

I really like the ip9000a, they are a little sketchy to get going but mine have worked without difficulty for years and i've installed them for a couple of friends converting old analog video systems and they work great. As long as you can live with the reduced frame rate around 1 or 2 fps. Which is generally fine for security but not so good if you want to see the specifics and details of what people are doing. Definitely saves disk space when recording though ;)

> 
> On the X10 Sentinel. Is there a way to control the PTZ  and preset positions on WebRemote for this camera? Just for kicks, I tried both the "Airsight Cam Control" and "Ninja Mount Control". As I expected, neither work for this cam.

There isn't, but there almost certainly could be.  The camera is discontinued now and X10's website has thrown away all legacy information at the moment so I can't find too many details. I THINK that it's controlled in a similar way to what the ninja mount controls were via x10 wireless commands from a remote control? But they may not be compatible with the standard transmitter/receivers which is what you need to figure out. DO you have an X10 wireless receiver like the CM19? I would use the remote for the camera while watching the log and see if the receiver actually receives any commands. If it does then it's quite possible that it can also transmit those commands and if you tell me what they are I can figure out how we can do that ;)

> 
> Another question I have is: can I connect some of the wireless X10 cams to read through Video Pitcher? I was considering connecting one of the wireless recievers directly to the IP900a and going from there, but that may not be the best solution. 

Sure, the wireless receivers should work fine plugged into the IP9000. but they are pretty much limited to just one camera being received at a time which is the whole point of the strange power supplies that the cameras come with that turn on and off with reception of X10 in the quadrile of addresses around the camera. If you can run a wire then you can keep all your cameras on all the time with a little re-wiring.

Thanks,
 	James


James Sentman                       http://sentman.com		http://MacHomeAutomation.com





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