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Figure 5.2a An illustration of how a small, single-channel video encoder can be positioned next to an analog
camera in a camera housing.
5.3
Rack-mounted video encoders
Rack-mounted video encoders are beneficial in instances where there are many analog cameras
with coaxial cables running to a dedicated control room. They enable many analog cameras to
be connected and managed from one rack in a central location. A rack allows a number of
different video encoder blades to be mounted and thereby offers a flexible, expandable, high-
density solution. A video encoder blade may support one, four or six analog cameras. A blade can
be seen as a video encoder without a casing, although it cannot function on its own; it has to
be mounted in a rack to operate.
Figure 5.3a When the AXIS Q7900 Rack (shown here) is fully outfitted with 6-channel video encoder blades, it can
accommodate as many as 84 analog cameras.
Axis video encoder racks support features such as hot swapping of blades; that is, blades can be
removed or installed without having to power down the rack. The racks also provide serial com-
munication and input/output connectors for each video encoder blade, in addition to a common
power supply and shared Ethernet network connection(s).
5.4
Video encoders with PTZ cameras and PTZ dome cameras
In a network video system, pan/tilt/zoom commands from a control board are carried over the
same IP network as for video transmission and are forwarded to the analog PTZ camera or PTZ
dome camera through the video encoder’s serial port (RS-232/422/485). Video encoders, therefore,
CHAPTER 5 - VIDEO ENCODERS