![]() ![]() and you can check available addresses using the steps in the guide linked above) (Just as an example, if you identify your router address as 192.168.1.254 then the gateway address of each camera needs to be 192.168.1.254 and the IP addresses of each camera need to be any number between 1 and 254 on that IP range - e.g. If you are unsure of your local networks IP range and/or the IP addresses on your network that are available then you can use this forum guide to help find that information. If you would rather not reset the cameras then you can find the devices in SADP while they still have the subnet addresses and then using the NVR activation password you can change the IP addresses of each camera manually or using DHCP. (either manually or automatically using DHCP). ![]() ![]() To connect cameras on your local network to the NVR you will need to either hard reset the camera, activate them in the SADP Tool on a PC, and then set IP and gateway addresses to addresses on your local network range. So when you have moved the cameras to the PoE switch on your local network they are still set up with the subnet addresses which are not visible on your local network and so when you then try and add them to the NVR over your local network the NVR cannot make a connection. Ok, so when you directly connect the cameras to the PoE ports on the NVR they are activated with the NVRs activation password (which is usually the NVR login password) and are assigned an IP address on the NVR subnet IP address range () which is not accessible from your local network. ![]()
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