Detailed diagrams, cable guidance and step-by-step instructions for Australian installations.

Coax to IP CCTV Upgrade Diagram

Coax to IP CCTV Upgrade Diagram explains a typical cctv wiring diagrams layout. It is designed to help you understand how the major parts connect, what cable is commonly used and what should be checked before fit-off and commissioning. For larger CCTV deployments, recorder sizing, switch PoE budget, storage days, low-light performance and cable route planning all matter.

Important: This page is a detailed planning reference only. It is not a substitute for the actual wiring manual, certified design documentation or licensed electrical/security work where required.

Diagram overview

Coax to IP CCTV Upgrade DiagramDetailed concept layout only – always verify the exact wiring against the device manual and site conditions.EthernetCoaxCoax / converterView / playbackExisting Coax RunLegacy cableEoC / ConverterIP over coaxIP CameraUpgraded endpointNVR / SwitchRecorder sideMonitor / AppViewingKey pointCheck converter compatibility andbandwidth.Installation tipIdentify each reused coax runclearly.Planning noteNot every old cable route issuitable for reuse.DocumentationTest the full link before relyingon it.

The diagram above shows the logical relationship between field devices, control equipment, power sources and user interfaces. Adapt the layout to suit the actual brand, terminal names, distance and site conditions.

What cable is commonly used?

The table below lists common cable choices for this type of system. Treat these as typical Australian industry choices rather than universal rules.

ConnectionCommon cableTypical purposeNotes
IP camera home runCat5e or Cat6 solid copperPoE data + power to IP camerasCat6 is preferred on new work and for future headroom.
Patch leadsFactory-made Cat6 patch leadsCabinet patchingUse short, labelled patch leads in cabinets.
Monitor connectionHDMILocal monitor connection to NVRUse quality HDMI leads, especially on longer runs.
Non-PoE camera power2 core figure-8 or 18/2 power cable12V DC cameras and accessoriesCheck voltage drop on long runs.
Long-distance uplinkSingle-mode or multi-mode fibreSeparate building or high-noise areasUseful when copper distance limits are exceeded.

Step-by-step installation approach

A sensible workflow reduces mistakes and produces better documentation. The following sequence is a practical starting point.

Step 1

Review the scope for coax to ip cctv upgrade diagram and list every field device, controller, power supply, rack item and interface that needs to appear on the drawing.

Step 2

Mark the physical locations on a site sketch so cable routes, service access and cabinet positions are clear before any cable is pulled.

Step 3

Choose the cable type for each link based on power, data, distance, environment and manufacturer requirements rather than guessing or standardising everything to one cable.

Step 4

Run and label each cable clearly at both ends. Use a naming convention that matches the diagram, cable schedule and equipment labels.

Step 5

Terminate devices carefully and confirm terminal naming, polarity, shield handling, reader bus or PoE requirements before powering the system.

Step 6

Test continuity, link status and basic device operation before final dressing and permanent fixing. This saves major rework later.

Step 7

Commission the full system, confirm power loads, lock behaviour, monitoring logic or network settings, and record any variations from the original concept.

Step 8

Update the final as-built diagram and keep it with the job records so the next technician can fault-find or expand the system efficiently.

Tools, materials and checks

Useful items on hand

  • Label printer or marker system
  • Cable tester / network tester as appropriate
  • Manufacturer installation manual
  • Basic hand tools and termination tools
  • Site plan or sketch for route marking
  • Notebook or digital cable schedule

Before you power up

  • Confirm voltage and polarity.
  • Check PoE class and total switch budget if relevant.
  • Verify lock type, relay logic or monitored input behaviour where relevant.
  • Check cable labels against the diagram and schedule.
  • Make sure pathways are protected and weather suitable.
  • Photograph the final terminations for future reference.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Using the wrong cable type because the device only looked similar to another one.
  • Ignoring distance limits, voltage drop or PoE budget calculations.
  • Forgetting that lock power, relays and monitored inputs often need separate planning.
  • Leaving cables unlabelled or relying on memory for panel, switch or controller ports.
  • Skipping the as-built update after the commissioning stage.
Need a real-world installation design? For site-specific CCTV, alarm, intercom or access control design in Sydney, Serious Security can help translate concept diagrams into a real installation plan.

Frequently asked questions

Can I use Cat6 for everything?

No. Cat6 is excellent for IP and PoE devices, but alarms, reader buses, lock circuits, 2-wire intercoms and power feeds often need different cable types.

Do I still need the manufacturer manual?

Yes. This page is a practical guide, but terminal naming, current draw, address settings and approved cable types must always be confirmed in the actual product documentation.

Should I create a cable schedule as well as a diagram?

Absolutely. A cable schedule makes installation, testing, handover and future maintenance much easier.

Next step

Use the next resource to turn this page into a practical plan, worksheet or quote brief.