CCTV CATEGORY
Plan camera coverage, recording, and maintenance with clearer CCTV guidance.
A good CCTV decision is not only about camera count. It should match blind spots, recording time, remote viewing, night visibility, wiring practicality, and future service support. This page gives one cleaner route for home and business security planning.
Home security
Homes usually need clear entry coverage, simple mobile access, and manageable camera count instead of overbuilt commercial layouts.
Shop and office security
Business CCTV should protect billing desks, entrances, storage, and movement paths without leaving blind spots.
Maintenance and uptime
Camera systems also need future support for hard drives, cable issues, power stability, and recorder checks.
Check before buying
- List the exact points you need to watch instead of guessing camera count first.
- Ask how many days of recording backup are needed.
- Check whether remote mobile viewing and later service access are important.
Common wrong decisions
- Choosing too many weak cameras instead of fewer well-placed cameras.
- Ignoring recorder storage and cable quality.
- Buying a package without clear local support after installation.
How Dalmia Computers helps CCTV buyers
- We guide the right number of cameras from the actual site layout.
- We help with recorder planning, remote access, and ongoing maintenance.
- We keep CCTV buying and later support under one local path.
How many cameras should a small shop use?
That depends on entrances, billing, storage, and blind spots. A simple site survey usually gives a better answer than a guess based on package size.
Do you help with remote viewing setup?
Yes. Mobile access, recorder setup, and network coordination can be part of the same CCTV planning route.
Can old CCTV systems be upgraded?
Yes. In some cases cameras, storage, or wiring can be improved without replacing every part of the setup.