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Gas Station Security Camera Systems
Security Camera Tips and Benefits for Gas Stations
POSTED 12/01/2008 by Andy Wendt

Security
Cameras at Gas Stations…not a new concept but it is one that should be touched
on and brought up to speed with the times.
Most gas stations across the country have been using one form or another of
security cameras for years. Many stations still have their original taped-based
security system while others still use just a monitor with no recording device at
all.
One important thing these holdouts from the last century might want to consider
is that even without a modern DVR or a recording device the wire that the CCTV
security cameras are most likely using is a common coax cable still used today.
This allows a great deal of the old infrastructure and sometimes the cameras
themselves to be easily incorporated into a new PC Based DVR security system.
If your Gas Station Security Camera System has been installed for so
long that you have not quite caught the significance of this, let me remind you
that, depending on how many cameras you have installed and how large your
facility, the cost of installing the wiring for the cameras could have easily been
over 30% of the total cost of your security system. Being able to use the
existing wire is then a great savings for those looking to upgrade.
But those cost saving tips aside, a security camera system at a gas station can
be a great way to cut down on merchandise shrinkage from both staff and
customers, and it can also be a great deterrent and aid in the prevention and prosecution
of drive-offs. It can also be a great management information tool as it allows
store owners to monitor the shop remotely across the internet in live time and
even remotely play back previously recorded incidents.
Some new developments in the world of professional grade security camera systems
include the ability to mix IP or Network Cameras in with a traditional CCTV
based DVR. You may have read about IP cameras over the last few months or years
and if you read the same articles that I did, you might be thinking IP cameras are
all that and a bag of chips. Well, I would not go that far but I do think it’s
worth mentioning how IP cameras can help the security situation at the typical
gas station.
IP cameras have the ability to record their video at a much higher resolution
than a traditional CCTV camera. A gas station using the right DVR, such as a
Dell Based GeoVision
DVR unit, can take advantage of this increased resolution in
key areas and incorporate IP cameras into a traditional CCTV environment. For
example, a high resolution IP camera watching the cars at the pumps can give the
station owner the ability to digitally zoom in after the fact and more easily
capture vehicle plate information than would otherwise be the case with lower
resolution CCTV cameras. The same technique could be applied to other critical
areas of the facility such as any choke points that either cars or people must
all pass through.
Key to this scenario is that based on where we currently see IP technology we
believe that your best solution comes from using IP cameras to supplement your
CCTV based security system as opposed to building a system of entirely IP
cameras. This belief comes from two facts that are often overlooked and buried
in the mass marketing campaign that has become the IP camera propaganda machine.
First of all, IP cameras and their amazing ability to connect directly to the
internet or intranet require additional built-in intelligence that is called a
web server. Having a built in web server allows an IP camera to be directly
accessible across a traditional office network or even the internet. This
feature, however, adds an inherent level of additional costs that are neither
devoted to the cameras optics or housing.
Secondly, IP cameras with their increasing resolution struggle to transmit at
frame rate speeds commonly requested of a traditional CCTV security camera
system. This problem is an age old trade-off of frame rates and image
resolution, the higher the resolution the more bandwidth and processing power
that is required to transmit the video at high frame rates. Currently a
reasonable expectation is between 3-7 frames per second on a mega-pixel IP
camera compared to the lower resolution CCTV cameras that can easily record at
30 frames per second. Such a low frame rate as offered by today’s IP cameras can
have its place but I would caution against making an across the board trade of
frame rates for resolution.
Finally, I think it’s worth mentioning that when a gas station implements a
modern traditional CCTV security camera system, a mixed CCTV and IP system, or
even an entire IP solution that these systems all offer the ability for multiple
event notifications methods and remote monitoring capable of being used by local
law enforcement in live time in case of emergency.
For more information on how a security camera system can help your gas station
please follow any of the links below or call us today at 877-422-1907.
To learn more about Security Cameras visit our
CCTV
Learning Center or our
Ask a CCTV
Expert Discussion forum.
Click here to request more information or a
Quote on a CCTV Security
Camera Systems for your Gas Station.
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