CCTV Specs
CCTV Specs
SECTION 28 20 00
1. IP CCTV SYSTEM
PART 1 - GENERAL
1.1 OVERVIEW
B. All components of the security Video System shall be from One Manufacturer, these
components shall be & not limited to IP Camera, Network Storage Video, System
manager, Video Gateway, Monitoring Stations, Video Consoles, and Joystick & LED
Monitor. The manufacturer shall give three years warranty Certificate on all Security
Video System components provided in this project
C. The Contractor shall furnish and install all security video cameras, pan/tilt/zoom (PTZ)
cameras, mounts, housings, power supply systems, network cables, connectors,
equipment racks, monitors and consoles, computer controlled network switchers, work
stations, network video recorders, encoders, decoders, video console displays and all
other hardware and software to provide a fully operational system. System shall
permit the normal and event monitoring of all secured areas on analog or VGA
Monitors as required or shown in the specifications and drawings In all cases
equipment shall be state-of-the-art, standardized, commercial, off-the-shelf and
modular. In all cases, the method of communication from remote locations within the
network to the central components shall be transparent to the user. Equipment shall
be selected and installed so repairs may be accomplished on site, by module
replacement, utilizing spare components whenever possible.
D. The intent of this specification is to provide to the owner a distributed networked digital
security system supplied by the Contractor and shall be a complete and operational
system per the performance requirements and objectives of these specifications.
Contractor shall be responsible for the coordination of related work with other trades
affecting his work or the work of others
A. W ork shall be performed in accordance with the applicable national and local codes or
standards current at the commencement of installation. The following list summarizes
applicable standards:
A. The IP Video Security System network shall be arranged so each area will operate
independently and shall communicate via a 1000 baseT (Giga-bit) network at a
minimum to the System Manager. The system shall utilize virtual matrix switcher
capabilities through the use of a System Manager. The System Manager shall provide
a user interface and database management of the IP Video Security System. The
System Manager shall allow for users to be restricted via software to logical
configurable groups of cameras, monitors and system operations.
B. The System Manager shall be capable of performing as a NTP Server for the entire
system. The IP Video Security System shall be synchronized to an NTP server so that
all system components are on the same time clock basis. The NTP server shall reside
within the system, and be capable of being driven by external time sources if needed.
All time-zone corrections shall automatically be provided in the system
C. The System Manager shall be capable of performing as a DHCP and UPnP server for
the entire system and components. The System Manager shall provide all connection
and management communications between system devices
D. The System Manager shall be capable of incorporating RSA 256 bit public/private key
authentication in addition to custom bit public/private keys. The system shall be
capable of authenticating any video produced by the encoder that originally produced
the stream, Network Storage Unit recording the stream, operator who exported the
stream, all with time/date stamped video.
E. The System Manager shall manage rights and permissions for all devices, persons,
and any system video or other data.
F. The IP Video Security System based digital recording and monitoring system shall
incorporate a fault tolerant architecture and shall include redundancy in critical areas
of concern. Encoders, power supplies and Network Storage Unit / Storage Expansion
Box power supplies shall be capable of redundancy. In addition, all Network Storage
Units and storage boxes shall provide RAID 6 redundancy as a standard in case of any
system failure.
G. The system shall provide an API/SDK that is capable of being used at a level that is
consistent with a full-featured gateway. The gateway shall provide RS232 ASCII
interface, Ethernet interface, and the ability to create custom plug-ins to the system
user interface
H. The system shall provide multi-level diagnostics of each component in all critical
areas. These diagnostics shall be reported to a diagnostic console for processing. In
addition, the diagnostic data shall be capable of being scripted into actionable events
within the system. Further, the diagnostics shall be capable of being mined by
network diagnostic systems such as Open View, Tivoli, and others.
I. The IP Video Security System shall be able to handle future expansion of an unlimited
total capacity from what is shown in the drawings, including but not limited to cameras,
monitors, alarm circuits and relay closures.
A. The following capabilities are considered essential for IP Video Security System
described in this specification.
1. The IP Based Video Security System software shall provide a built-in Digital Video
Virtual Matrix Switcher. The IP Video Security System shall support the ability to
switch any camera in the system to any monitor in the system, either through a
PC Keyboard/Mouse or a joystick controller to either an analog or VGA Monitor.
4. The System Manager shall manage system security, functioning as a key manager
for user and device authentication, and it shall route communication between all
devices on large, sub-netted security networks. The system manager shall store
and administer secure keys and shall have multi-level and user permission
management.
5. The System Manager shall function as the default system time network video
recorder, using the industry standard NTP protocol, to ensure integrated devices
are synchronized. The system manager shall support UPnP architecture and shall
provide DHCP services, supporting the dynamic addition of network devices.
6. The System Manager shall store a database of device errors, alarms, and other
system events, and the comprehensive database shall be accessed and searched
through the system log window. The system manager supports data replication: a
duplicate set of critical system data can be stored on a second System Manager,
enabling quick and easy transition to IP Video Security equipment.
9. The IP Video Security System shall have the capability of the following
functionalities:
• The system shall be fully distributed in nature so that each system device
can remain operational in a majority of modes without dependence on
other devices.
• Each individual entry in a sequence shall have the capacity to trigger PTZ
camera presets, patterns or auxiliaries.
• Multiple users shall be able to view the same camera view or sequence
simultaneously. The system shall utilize Multi-cast streaming video to allow
multiple users to view the same video stream, though not necessarily
synchronized with each other, without affecting the bandwidth of the
network.
10. The IP Video Security System shall have the capability to create and execute a
system script used to control any system function, and may be combined into any
order. The configuration of such scripts shall be easy to use and follow the rules
of drag and drop configuration. The following actions are minimal requirements:
• Utilize Script Nesting, a means of running another script within any given
script.
• Activate system relays and send e-mail notification to any recipient via
POP3.
11. The scripting language shall utilize a system function upload and will modify or
send out a global command to all components in the system.
13. The IP Video Security System shall allow for programming of alarms and
associated incoming alarms with related parts of the system.
15. The IP Video Security System shall log all alarms and events in the System
Manager database.
16. The IP Video Security System shall provide real time system status on the
operator GUI. For example, all alarms, present monitor activity, selected PTZ
camera ID in user defined descriptive text.
17. The IP Video Security System shall be capable of the following languages -
English, French. In addition the system shall be capable of accepting new
language packages from one central point. Additionally, the system shall allow
for user profiles by language to be loaded into any operational location including
workstations and virtual matrix controllers
PART 2 - PRODUCTS
A fully functional state of the art IP CCTV system shall be supplied. The scope of supply should
include the following items as a minimum:
2.1) IP Server
a. The Server shall be designed to run on a Windows platform, supporting both
Desktop and Server class operating systems including Windows7, 2008r2, and
2012.
b. Server shall run as a Window’s Service. This service shall run as part of the local
service account. This service shall be running as long as the system is booted and
has started Windows. It shall not require the user to be logged in.
c. The Server will store settings in SQL Express and shall not require a full MS-SQL
license.
d. The Server shall have an option for a 32 bit binary and a true 64-bit binary. In a 64
bit OS, the server shall run as a native 64 bit application, not merely a 32 bit
application.
e. The service shall connect to the camera and handle streaming to the server. It
shall not require each client to connect to individual cameras.
f. This service shall allow the cameras to be placed on one network and the clients
on a separate network using a different IP range.
g. The software shall support the ONVIF standard.
h. The software shall support Megapixel virtual cameras within a single camera
license.
i. The server shall only require two ports for streaming video as well as handling any
setting changes or commands from the client software.
j. The Server shall record the video streams from different cameras.
• The service shall handle transcoding of the camera streams if the cameras
are MJPEG based. The video shall be re-encoded to WMV to reduce
storage needs and to reduce the impact of streams to clients on the server.
• For MPEG-4 based cameras, the video shall be stored in the native codec of
the server.
• For H.264 based cameras the video shall be stored in the native codec of
the server.
• Each camera will have the option to be able to be stored in different
locations (i.e. One locally, another on a NAS, a third on a different network
share)
• Streaming from server to client shall support H.264.
• The server must have Pivot 3 integration.
k. The Server shall support H.264, MPEG-4, MJPEG and MXPEG based cameras.
l. The Server shall support motion detection at the camera and at the software
levels.
m. The Server shall provide graphic examples of what it determines as motion to thick
clients if the thick client requests it.
• The software shall display the motion detection as an outline around the
area moving.
• The software shall provide a bar showing the total percentage of change.
This bar shall have a slider on it to allow the user to quickly set motion
detection.
n. The Server shall allow for multiple zones to be set within an image that support
differing motion detection values within a cameras field of view.
• There shall be no limit on the total number of zones allowed, either on a per
camera or per server basis.
• Zones should allow the ability to ignore motion within an area.
• The user shall have the ability to move the zones after the fact.
• Motion zones should be able to be tied into a rules engine to allow the
software use them as triggers for events.
o. The Server shall support the use of imported maps to show camera placement.
These maps will be in .jpg, .gif, or .bmp formats as determined by the user.
• Hovering over a camera on a map shall cause it to be displayed in a window
on the side.
• When the camera is displayed on the side, the option to review recently
recorded video will be available to them.
• The user shall be able to embed layouts onto the facility map. Clicking on
the layout shall change the display of the client software.
• Alarms from DIOs shall be able to be embedded as well.
• Audio sources shall also be an option.
• Other facility maps shall also be an option to embed. Clicking on a different
embedded map shall bring up that map.
• Doors from certain access control systems can be imported and displayed.
Hovering over the door shall display the last badge used to badge in, a live
view of the camera associated with the door. The user from this pop up shall
be able to see badge events and alarm events along with the associated
video.
p. The Server shall not require the administrator to contact the manufacturer to
replace a camera.
q. The Server shall support reporting to a diagnostic tool.
• The server will report the number of active cameras.
• The server shall report active cameras offline.
• The version of the server.
• The amount of disk space left.
• The recording status of the server.
r. The server shall support pre-motion and post motion recording.
s. The server shall support customizable layouts. The layouts will allow for blank
spaces within the layout.
t. The server shall support an unlimited number of users.
• Users can be drawn from either an Active Directory server, Novell eDirectory
or entered manually.
• There will be five different levels of user.
• Users can be members of a group with settings set for the group. Individual
user settings can override the group settings.
• Permissions can be set for live viewing, access to recorded video, control of
PTZ cameras, access to audio, the ability to export video, custom layouts,
facility maps and rules. Permissions can be defined on a per camera basis.
• The server shall support the option of having the users limited to being
signed in to a single location.
u. The server will include a diagnostic version with limited interface, to allow for
testing of the server.
v. The server shall support an optional secondary server with fallover capacity.
w. A rules engine shall be included to allow the server to handle more complex tasks.
• Triggers will include:
1. Dry contacts (DIO)
• The tree view will also include access to custom layouts, facility maps and
action buttons.
• There will be an option to hide the tree on start up of the monitor station.
• The user shall be able search for cameras using a searchable box on the
left hand tree.
g. The thick client will not be limited in the number of servers it can connect to.
h. Live view will allow views of 1, 4, 8, 9, 10, 13, 16, 25 and 36 cameras. A
widescreen option for 18 and 24 cameras will also be available.
• Layouts will be selectable via icon or keyboard function keys.
• Layouts will not be limited to cameras from a single server.
• Users will be able to get any combinations of layouts to cycle through on the
main screen.
• Users will be able to designate cameras within a layout to be able to cycle
between multiple cameras from multiple servers.
• Layouts shall be able to be put into groups.
i. If motion is detected on a camera then the software, then the camera shall have a
red pulse around the edge of the window.
j. Live view will allow cameras to be dragged and dropped onto the live view from the
left hand tree. Cameras can be duplicated in a view.
k. Users will be able to invoke a digital zoom by drawing a box.
l. After invoking the digital zoom, the Monitor Station shall support the use of picture
in picture within the zoomed image.
m. Digitally zoomed areas will be treated as a digital PTZ.
n. PTZ Presets shall be listed in a drop down menu in the camera window.
o. Users shall be able to move the PTZ movements simply by clicking on the image
or by using the scroll wheel.
p. Live view will support a full screen mode that hides the UI. User shall be able to
start the Monitor Station in this full screen mode with a setting.
q. Live view shall allow the user to de-warp the video from panoramic lenses and
cameras.
r. Right clicking on a camera in live view will have the following behaviors:
• Right clicking on a camera within live view will allow the user to be able to
review the recently recorded video for that camera.
• Right clicking on a camera within live view will also allow access to the
properties dialog box for that camera.
• Right clicking on a camera will bring up the option to save a still image of the
live view.
• Live audio will be able to be accessed by right clicking on a camera in the
live view.
• Allowing access to recorded video.
s. Recorded video will be able to be accessed by right clicking the live view,
expanding the camera in the tree view, or by opening the media player via the pull
down menus.
t. The Media player shall support the following functionality:
• The ability to fast forward and rewind video at up to 16x normal playback
speed. .
• The ability to generate clips of recorded video. The clips can be defined by
either frame numbers or by the use of slider bars visible on the player.
• The ability to save video directly to a CD or to a local hard drive or network
share.
• If motion detection and logging are enabled, a timeline of video will be
displayed. The user will be able to zoom in on the timeline and use it to
select where video will start playing from.
• Users will have access to a motion log which will show motion events and
how long they occurred for. Clicking on the entry will start the video from the
appropriate spot.
• The player will support digital zoom.
• The player will have the option to allow an object search. The user will be
able to define an area and seek out changes in the image within that area.
• The User shall have the option of forcing export of video as the native codec
of the camera or MJPEG.
• User will have the option to burn time-date into the video as a clip.
• Users will have the option of burning in the Video Insight logo on a clip.
• Users will have the option to create a time index file for clips.
• Users will be able to grab a snapshot of the recorded video.
u. Synchronized playback will allow for cameras to simply be dragged and dropped
into the player. The Synchronized player shall allow for the exporting of the view of
up to four cameras a single video file.
v. The thick client will include a repair utility for corrupted video.
w. The Monitor Station will be able to display logging information, such as changes to
the server, lost camera signals, who exported recorded video, when did users log-
on/off and other errors. This functionality will be limited to administrative users.
The log will be exportable as txt or to the Windows clipboard.
x. The Monitor Station shall also provide real time status updates for server status
and camera status, including the CPU usage, disk usage, bandwidth usage,
licensing and number and names of users who are logged in.
y. The system will support an Alarm Log to make it easier to find DIO based events.
z. Facility maps will be available in the software for viewing.
• When the user hovers over a camera in the facility map it will display the
camera in a window off the side of the map.
• While a camera is displayed it will allow access to recorded video from that
camera as well as the live stream.
• Cameras will display where they are pointed.
• Embedded layouts will change the layout of the Monitor station if they are
clicked on.
• Embedded Facility maps will cause the current map to change to the
embedded map if clicked on.
• The user will have the option of importing and placing doors from supported
access control partners on the map. This shall allow them to see badge
events as well as alarm events. It shall also support the ability to lock and
unlock doors from the map.
• Panic button events from the Audio Enhancement systems will be visible on
the map as well.
aa. The Monitor Station will support the Axis Joystick as well as standard USB
joysticks.
bb. The software shall support the ability to open a live window that can be moved
around. This window will be able to access the view of any camera or layout the
user has access to.
cc. The user will be able to enable or disable the following settings:
• Server name in the live view.
• Camera Name in the live view.
• Audio notification on motion.
• Forcing aspect ratio.
• Use Direct Show for display.
• Double clicking to change the server layout.
• Double clicking expands the camera.
• Allowing multiple live windows.
• Block live windows from popping up.
• Live window always on top.
• The speed in which layouts cycle.
• Hiding left tree on start up.
• Launching Facility maps on start up.
dd. Users with Administrator privileges will be able to configure the server and camera
settings. Users will also be able to test SMTP settings and database settings.
• Users will be able to configure the framerate of the camera, including the option to
have the server record continuously at 1 fps with the option to go to the cameras
maximum framerate on motion detection.
• Users will be able to select various time-lapse options for the camera.
• Users will be able to select the camera stream type.
• Users will be able to select camera or server side motion detection.
ee. Users will be able to access a graphic representation of what the server’s motion
detection settings are picking up.
ff. Users will be able to configure user settings as well as layout settings from within
the thick client.
gg. The software shall allow users to send video or messages to other users in the
form of a popup window.
hh. The Monitor Station will allow users to send video to other users, allowing for
remote live pop ups of video of important events.
ii. The Monitor Station will support Layout touring. Selecting a layout will cycle
through a list of cameras.
jj. User shall be able to allow for remote support via the monitor station.
The Video Wall Processing System shall have high-quality, multi-source display processors.
Multiple video and computer sources shall route to the Video Wall Processing System and be
displayed on a single display. layouts shall be customized so individual windows can be sized and
positioned anywhere on the screen. The Video Wall Processing System shall also create labels
and/or on-screen borders for easy identification, swap image locations and bring an image to full
screen with the use of the mouse. The PMM software is required to configure and control the
Video Wall Processing System. This program shall give you access to system level commands,
group level commands, and window level commands. All commands shall be accessed through
the PMM window.
The Video Wall Processing System shall Acquisition and digitization of virtually any video or
computer visual source distribution and routing of those sources within the enterprise to the
appropriate displays. The Video Wall Processing System shall display and manipulation (scale,
size, zoom, crop) of sources on the video wall or display. The Video Wall Processing System shall
Control and management of the entire system from the source to display.
The Video Wall Processing System shall digitize and route all visual sources (PC, TV, video,
camera) uncompressed on the network. It will multiplex and route the various streams into a single,
high bandwidth connection to the video wall. It shall carries all sources from the video wall to
another wall or large-format display. It shall creates an ultra-high resolution desktop on the video
wall and can bring network data and applications from the customer network to the video wall. It
shall scales and positions the correct images for a particular cube distributing the processing
burden and resulting in greater overall scalability.
e.
The PC workstation shall be a server-class personal computer with two dual-links DVI-I
monitor outputs, USB keyboard, and mouse.
The PC workstation shall use a graphical user interface and keyboard/mouse that runs on 32-
bit Microsoft Windows Vista Business for monitoring live and recorded video, and virtual
matrix functionality that allows operators to see and respond to any alarm from any device on
the network as well as direct any camera to any monitor on the network.
The PC workstation shall allow administrators to configure devices, set up users, adjust
network settings, and create recording schedules. Permission to access these functions and
all other system services can be configured to a fine level of detail including the ability to
restrict cameras from viewers, restrict PTZ operation, allow or restrict digital zoom, Zone of
Interest operations, or the ability to configure maps. In addition, user permissions shall allow
for designated users to receive and respond to alarm and system diagnostic messages.
The PC workstation shall have advanced search capabilities, event logging, and alarm
interface displays. The PC workstation shall export video and still images in multiple formats,
including QuickTime MPEG-4, H.264, AVI, BMP, and JPG. The unit shall provide a front panel
USB port and DVD/CD-RW drive to make it capable of exporting video clips and still images
to external media.
The PC workstation shall allow users with authority to monitor content from standard
resolution and megapixel resolution cameras and encoders throughout the network. The PC
workstation shall display content encoded in MPEG-4, H.264 baseline, H.264 main, and H.264
high profile. The PC workstation shall support cameras from multiple manufacturers.
The PC workstation shall be capable of minimizing the CPU processing load and network
bandwidth, a scheme that automatically seeks out and subscribes to a secondary stream from
the cameras or encoders at a lower resolution when the display is changed to a multichannel
display.
The PC workstation shall support CCTV-style (joystick) keyboard control of PTZ cameras and
camera call-up.
The PC workstation shall detect the monitor’s native resolution and provide users with single,
2 x 2, 3 x 3, 4 x 4, 1 + 5, 1 + 12, 2 + 8 displays for 4:3 aspect ratio monitors and shall provide
3 x 2 and 4 x 3 displays for 16:9 aspect ratio monitors.
The PC workstation shall retain the camera’s aspect ratio and allow mixing standard
resolution and megapixel resolution cameras on the same display.
The PC workstation shall provide digital zoom capability for any camera in live or playback
mode.
The PC workstation shall provide a zone of interest feature that can generate up to six
independently controlled and zoomed images from a single image and allow operators to
maintain a panoramic view of the scene while closely monitoring selected areas. This shall be
accomplished without requiring additional network throughput.
The system shall be capable of customizing the display area to suit user preferences. All
aspects of the graphical user interface can be resized, torn-off and moved to other monitors,
or simply hidden. Up to 6 customizable workspaces can be created and loaded with camera
groups to facilitate easy and efficient monitoring. The system shall allow for up to two
detachable video display windows to accommodate up to a 32-camera display.
The PC workstation shall automatically load a user’s language preferences, camera groups,
and screen configurations upon login. The PC workstation shall also support languages that
do not use the Latin alphabet such as Arabic.
The PC workstation shall notify designated operators of all alarms on the system in an alarm
tab. Video thumbnails shall be available for visual verification within the alarm monitoring
workspace. Alarms can be acknowledged or snoozed by the operator. The PC workstation
application shall support the functionality to view procedures and instructions for given alarms;
triggered to appear during alarm events, while generating detailed written or verbal
instructions to the operator as to the actions to be taken. An operator shall have the capability
of entering his or her own feedback to the given alarm. All user alarms and user actions shall
be kept in the system log for audit purposes.
The PC workstation application shall provide the ability to control and program any camera
equipped with PTZ. The PC workstation shall be capable of the following operations:
1. Manually control the PTZ
2. Set the pan/tilt home positions for manual or alarm activation
3. Automatically control the cameras through an alarm trigger
4. Ability to set multiple preset positions
5. Ability to set multiple tours
6. Remotely set and clear the movement limits of the pan/tilt mechanism from the control room,
through a telemetry unit at an outdoor camera site
R. The workstation shall meet or exceed the following design and performance specifications.
The keyboard controls are located on three modules in the keyboard. Modules shall be
capable of rotating to suit user preferences. The keyboard modules shall include a variable
speed, vector-solving joystick for precise pan/tilt/zoom (PTZ) control, jog/shuttle for playback
control and pattern control, a keypad for camera and monitor control, and a built-in speaker.
The keyboard shall have LED buttons that work in conjunction with the feature being used
The keyboard shall be part of an integrated system and shall be configured so any number of
keyboards can be added to the system. When combined with user interfaces (UIs), Network
Storage Unit Network Storage Unit’s, encoders, and video consoles, the keyboard forms an
integral part of a complete network-based video control system.
The keyboard shall meet or exceed the following design and performance specifications.
2. Bullet Camera
• Sensor: 1/3”Progressive Scan CMOS
• Industry Standard H.264 with Multi-streams
• Stream1 :2688*1520/2560*1440/2304*1296/1920*1080, Stream 2:720p to
QVGA
• Max resolution/Max frame rate:
2688*1520/2560*1440/20fps,2304*1296/25fps,1920*1080/30fps
• IR LED / IR Distance: 10 PCS Super flux IR LED 850nm/25-30 meters
• True Day/Night with ICR Filter. High Powered IR LEDs
• Lens: 3.0~12mm Vari-focal IR Corrected
3. Dual Lens Fixed IP Cameras 4 Mega Pixel With Video Analytics ( Dome Duo )
®
The Microdome Duo series network camera is dual encoder (H.264 & MJPEG), 4 megapixel
resolution, mechanical true Day/Night IP camera, designed to provide an all-in-one solution
with two integrated 1080p CMOS sensors, two remote focus modules, two IR corrected
lenses, IK-10 vandal resistant dome and housing, rated IP66 for water and dust protection, to
use camera for indoor and outdoor applications. It is a PoE (IEEE 802.3af) compliant camera,
featuring PSIA compliance, privacy masking, extended motion detection and flexible cropping.
it has the ability to output multiple image formats allowing simultaneous viewing of the full
resolution field of view and regions of interest for high definition forensic zooming.
Binning technique improves low-light performance, increases sensitivity and produces better
SNR by combining and averaging pixels. This camera offers over ten times the resolution of
standard-resolution IP cameras with the ability to output full real time frame rates.
With the features of SNAPstream™ to reduce bandwidth without impacting image quality, binning
technique improves low-light performance, increases sensitivity and produces better SNR by
combining and averaging pixels. This camera offers over 28 times the resolution of standard-
resolution IP cameras with the ability to output full real time frame rates.
• The camera shall integrate two 8.0mm M12 megapixel IR corrected lenses,
1/3”, F1.6, Horizontal Field of View of 30°.
• The camera shall have die-cast aluminum chassis with IK-10 vandal resistant
dome. Entire enclosure to be rated minimum IP66 for water and dust
protection.
• The camera shall have two 3-axis easily adjustable gimbals with 359˚ pan and
90˚ tilt for easy and accurate positioning.
• The camera shall have an integrated Remote Focus module.
• Alarm Input/Output: General purpose opto-coupled, 1 Input/1 Output
• The camera shall combine two image sensors for a user configurable field of
view.
• The camera shall have dual standard compression support with simultaneous
streaming of both H.264 and MJPEG formats.
• Each sensor of the camera shall feature automatic exposure, automatic multi-
matrix white balance, shutter speed control to minimize motion blur,
programmable resolution, brightness, saturation, gamma, sharpness and tint.
• The camera’s shutter speed shall be 1ms - 500ms.
• The camera shall feature automatic exposure, automatic multi-matrix white
balance, shutter speed control, 50/60Hz selectable flicker control,
programmable brightness, saturation, gamma, sharpness, windowing and
decimation, simultaneous delivery of full-field view and zoomed images at
video frame rate, instantaneous electronic zoom, pan and tilt.
• The Camera shall have Corridor View™ (90°, 180°, and 270° image rotation).
• The camera shall have multi-streaming support of up to 8 non-identical
concurrent streams (different frame rate, bitrate, resolution, quality and
compression format).
• The camera shall have dynamic range up to 69.5 dB and a maximum SNR of
45 dB.
• The camera shall have privacy masking, the ability to select multiple regions of
an arbitrary shape to block the video. The camera shall have extended motion
detection grid, a higher granularity grid of 1024 distinct motion detection zones.
User can select between 64 zone based motion detection and extended
motion detection to provide backward compatibility with the existing Video
Management System (VMS) integration. This feature shall support RTP, HTTP
and TFTP protocols, as well as the on-camera web interface.
• The camera shall feature streaming of the full field of view (FOV) and
simultaneous multiple regions of interest (ROI) for forensic zooming.
• The camera shall provide 21 levels of compression quality for optimal viewing
and archiving.
• It shall be possible to program the camera in binning mode to output lower
resolution images: i.e. 1920(H) x 590(V) pixels (1/4 full resolution) at 24FPS.
• The camera shall have flexible cropping with any resolution multiple of 2 for
H.264, any image width multiple of 64 for JPEG full resolution, any image
width multiple of 128 for JPEG half resolution (no restriction on image height
for JPEG).
• The camera shall be able to save bandwidth & storage by running at 1/4 full
resolution, allows for bit rate and bandwidth limitation control.
• The camera shall feature MoonLight™ mode - extended exposure and noise
cancellation.
• The camera shall be able to support Picture-in-Picture: simultaneous delivery
of full field of view and zoomed images.
• The camera shall be fully conformant with PSIA and ONVIF industry-standards
and pass conformance tests.
• Video frame rate (up to): 15FPS @ 3840 x 1080
• Video frame rate in cropped mode up to: 24FPS @ 1920 x 590
• The camera shall have Real Time Streaming Protocol (RTSP) support
allowing for compatibility with media players such as Apple QuickTime®, VLC
Player and others.
• The camera shall support both unicast and multicast communication protocol.
• The camera shall support at minimum RTSP, RTP over TCP, RTP over UDP
(Unicast/Multicast), HTTP1.0, HTTP1.1, DHCP, TFTP, QoS, IPv4 network
protocols.
• 100 Base-T Ethernet Network Interface.
• Multi-streaming: 8 non-identical streams (4 active connections to each
sensor).
• The camera shall be equipped with a 100 Mbps LAN connector.
• Color (Day Mode): 0.2 Lux
• B/W (Night Mode): 0.02 Lux, IR sensitive
• Operating temperature -40˚C (-40 °F) to +50˚C (122 °F)
• Stable image temperature 0˚C (32 °F) to +50˚C (122 °F)
• Storage temperature -40˚C (-4 °F) to +60˚C (140 °F)
• Humidity 0% to 90% (non-condensing)
A. The video console display shall be a high-performance, multiple stream decoding unit, shall
convert multiple MPEG-4 streams into video signal to be viewed on a VGA or analog monitor, and
shall provide a user interface to the Video Security system. The video console display shall allow
for up to 16, 32, 48, or 64 streams to be decoded and displayed simultaneously, and it shall allow
for video to be displayed on NTSC/PAL composite, NTSC/PAL S-video, or VGA monitors
(maximum VGA resolution 1024 x 768). Every output option shall display a single image, four
images (2x2), nine images (3x3), or sixteen images (4x4). When multiple images are displayed,
the patent-pending shall automatically provide the best video display frame rate for the selected
cameras.
B. The video console display shall provide a user interface to the Security Video system, and when
used with the keyboard controller, the video console display shall allow a user to operate the
system like a traditional matrix, using the joystick, jog shuttle, and keypad to control the video
display. The video console display shall also provide NETWORK STORAGE UNIT-like
functionality, allowing users to record, play back, and export video.
C. The video console display shall provide full access to operations through user-friendly, highly
intuitive, semi-transparent on-screen menus displayed in a graphical overlay on the monitor screen.
The video console display shall allow the user to turn the overlay on and off with a single button
push from the keyboard controller. The video console display shall have on-screen PTZ, device
playback, property controls, and alarm interface display.
D. The video console display system shall allow for growth to accommodate more users by adding
additional video console displays and keyboards and shall allow for the addition of monitors to
decode additional video inputs without adding user workstations. The video console display shall
allow for the installation of compatible four-channel decoders to create a completely scalable virtual
matrix, and it shall allow for multiple display views for live or playback cameras or devices.
E. The video console display shall meet or exceed the following design and performance
specifications
® ®
Processor: Dual-Core Intel Xeon 5500 series processors
Operating System: Linux or MS-windows
User Interface: Semitransparent on-screen overlays
Network Interface: Gigabit Ethernet RJ-45 port (1000BaseT)
PTZ Interface: On-screen or through Smart Joystick
USB Ports: Three or more USB 2.0 ports
Security: Two modes: secure mode (device authentication)
And unsecure mode
Latest system configuration must be submitted for approval by engineer or engineer representive
before delivery and installation.