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I know our community has a lot of love for Ubiquiti. At the moment we are using Meraki, but the new renewal, plus adding hardware to it seems a bit excessive, and I have been feeling limited by Meraki (support is awesome, but I have been having to call them a lot) So, I am looking at Ubiquiti. I think it will fit the bill. My most basic question is this: Does any of the routers from Ubiquity support 802.3 af? They have PoE but it is not in a standard. I must confess I am a total newbie with PoE, but I want to make sure all will work together. I want to use PoE for the AP and the cameras.
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At the moment I am looking at. EdgeRouter PoE 5 port (24V/48V Passive PoE). Unify-AP-AC-Pro (802.3af). Unify UVC G3/G3 Dome and UVC Pro.
Different cameras for different use I will also have to get the NVR for the cameras. So, will the EdgeRouter work, or I will have to add the Unify switch 8?
On a separate question, can I connect all the edgerouter together in VPN? At the moment I have all my Meraki Z1 connected to a MX80 at corporate, and while I never needed the VPN, it is nice now. I currently have 27 locations with Z1, and corporate with a MX80+3xMR12 Something that prompted me to look at ubiquity is that I need a new security camera solution, and I was looking at Meraki MV21. They are expensive, the Z1 does not have PoE so I will have to add a switch or replace the router with a MX65 (talk about overkill for a location with 2 people), and since I have to run the cable for the camera, I might as well run cable for AP and put the AP in the ceiling (we have problem with Wi-Fi coverage being spotty due to the equipment in the showroom containing a lot of steel). They are different solutions, but I still find Meraki limiting, and the hardware+license cost is high, not allowing for tiered deployment (not a rant, just stating why I am considering the switch).
Not sure this will change your mind much, but a couple quick things: - You can just use a POE injector for the cameras at the remote locations. And yes, the Meraki cameras seem expensive, but you don't need any NVR or storage and continue to get the support, security and warranty you are accustomed to. On the topic of support, if you are calling Meraki a lot now, I suspect you might not be happy to find out you can't call Ubiquiti at all. You stated that you find Meraki limiting, but in what way? Some technical limitation you have found?
I think the edgerouters can be connected in a VPN fashion. I know that the USG's can be connected via vpn, and the USG firmware is based on the ER firmware. Mind you the cameras you are looking at both work on different POE standards.
The G3-Domes support both the 802.3at and 802.3af while the G3-UVCs are just 802.3at. The G3 cameras come with injectors if you purchase them in packs smaller than 5 so that you can use whatever router/switch you please. You do not need to purchase an NVR, you can roll your own and this may be the smarter decision depending on how many cameras and how much retention of recordings you want.
We have just shy of 50 cameras with 1TB of space on our UFV controller, this provides us 1 month retention of record on motion for all cameras (motion zones are constantly being tuned). I will also mention, that you will likely want two controllers here, one for your network, and one for your video (it is possible to have them both on the same machine, but you have to move ports around). Likely you will have the network controller in the cloud to manage all of your sites. My suggestion is either one UFV controller for each site, or a cloud NVR, or have them all the cameras pointed back to your main site. This will all depend on the size of the upload pipes you have from all of your sites, and your download pipe at the main site. For the record, we looked at Meraki for a little bit, even got the free AP from them and went with Ubiquiti because of cost.
We have had very few issues with Ubiquiti (honestly, we have more issues with the cameras). I can't say I've had to contact support or post on the forums for anything networking related; I have however posted quite frequently about camera issues. We have all G2 cameras which are subpar to the G3 from what I've seen.
But communication about software updates and issues has been poor from the UFV dev team, they have been acknowledged, and are getting better. The software/firmware has also been getting much better from the UFV dev team. Also forgot to mention, you may have to do many a thing via command line/terminal/ssh for the Edgerouter (again I have a USG which is not as fleshed out as the ER and I have not used an ER). I know with the USG, a lot of things have not been exposed in the Unifi Controller. I think the ER has a separate interface, so if you're looking for single pane of glass, you may want to reconsider the gateway device you're choosing here. USG is based on ER firmware, and ER is based on Vyatta, so a lot of the documentation that applies to Vyatta firewall applies to both devices.
Brandon Svec wrote: Not sure this will change your mind much, but a couple quick things: - You can just use a POE injector for the cameras at the remote locations. And yes, the Meraki cameras seem expensive, but you don't need any NVR or storage and continue to get the support, security and warranty you are accustomed to. On the topic of support, if you are calling Meraki a lot now, I suspect you might not be happy to find out you can't call Ubiquiti at all. You stated that you find Meraki limiting, but in what way? Some technical limitation you have found? I am calling Meraki a lot because the dashboard does not allow to do a lot of the changes I need to do. Unfortunately, most of the calls could have been avoided with other products.
Their support is good, but I should not have to call because I can't tell what is happening on the network, or because I cannot see the TKIP connection, or because a lot of the VPN to 3rd party settings are hidden. PoE Injectors do not allow for remote shutdown of the port, while a switch will. Meraki is limiting because of the way it works. You can't get a lot of realtime data. We have a few T-1 locations and it is a pain to find out what, and with what is using the bandwith.
I can't tell current usage of the MX80 (Our corporate Internet is working slow and it has a 50Mbps fiber, and 50 coax, but neither are maxed and both services work well. And I can continue listing issues from support tickets with Meraki.
That is the problem, I don't need the support if the management interface allowed me to work on it. Dvdsmith wrote: Aside from the Meraki hardware, if you already have a router you don't need the Edgerouter. UniFi gear does not require it. The cameras and AP you list work on regular PoE ports. FWIW, the white UniFi Switches support the PoE standards and passive PoE, and are managed through the same controller software used for the APs. I know, it is actually part of my 3rd option that I will be presenting. Keeping the current Z1 is cheap.
The MX60W and the MX80 are not. Ideally I would like to have all in the same management interface and thus the reason why I am looking to replace routers as well. Since the enterprise agreement is coming up for renewal now is the time (and price wise replacing the Meraki is not bad because the renewal is $6k) Some of the cameras use 803.af, some 24 passive. I honestly did the research a few weeks ago but I already have it messed in my brain. I think it will work, but there are some caveats.
Tvm9 wrote: You don't have to move ports around with the current default ports in the NVR software and Unifi controller if they share the same computer. BTW, the UVC Pro cameras are discontinued. There are lots of options in the edgerouter CLI, so you can probably set up anything you can dream of. Sorry, you are corrent, I was mistaken about the ports. It's discovery that breaks. See: Also, I believe UFV is not currently supported on Ubuntu 16.04 while the Unifi Controller is supported. I recommend Ubuntu or Debian for the UFV machine as it just seems to constantly break on Windows (and only Win 7/8/8.1 are supported).
Totally missed that he was looking at UVC-Pro's. They are junk anyway, we have two and they constantly have issues. We've RMA'ed two of them and are waiting for the second to come back right now (just before the 1-year warranty runs out). The G3-UVC's, from what I hear, are sufficient successors to the G2-UVC and UVC-Pro - or at least a good compromise of the two. Dehcbad25 wrote: dvdsmith wrote: Aside from the Meraki hardware, if you already have a router you don't need the Edgerouter.
UniFi gear does not require it. The cameras and AP you list work on regular PoE ports. Satellite transponder list. FWIW, the white UniFi Switches support the PoE standards and passive PoE, and are managed through the same controller software used for the APs. I know, it is actually part of my 3rd option that I will be presenting.
Keeping the current Z1 is cheap. The MX60W and the MX80 are not.
Ideally I would like to have all in the same management interface and thus the reason why I am looking to replace routers as well. Since the enterprise agreement is coming up for renewal now is the time (and price wise replacing the Meraki is not bad because the renewal is $6k) Some of the cameras use 803.af, some 24 passive. I honestly did the research a few weeks ago but I already have it messed in my brain. I think it will work, but there are some caveats If you're looking for single pane of glass for management, look at the Unifi line of devices from Ubnt. While the USG's are new and developing, you can do a ton via command line. They are slowly exposing elements of control for it in the controller UI. The Unifi switches (unless you need 802.3af for other devices) do 802.3at which all of the devices you've listed support.
I've been happy with our USG-Pro-4 thus far, granted we've only had it for about two months. Zheins wrote: I think the edgerouters can be connected in a VPN fashion.
I know that the USG's can be connected via vpn, and the USG firmware is based on the ER firmware. Mind you the cameras you are looking at both work on different POE standards.
The G3-Domes support both the 802.3at and 802.3af while the G3-UVCs are just 802.3at. The G3 cameras come with injectors if you purchase them in packs smaller than 5 so that you can use whatever router/switch you please. You do not need to purchase an NVR, you can roll your own and this may be the smarter decision depending on how many cameras and how much retention of recordings you want. We have just shy of 50 cameras with 1TB of space on our UFV controller, this provides us 1 month retention of record on motion for all cameras (motion zones are constantly being tuned).
I will also mention, that you will likely want two controllers here, one for your network, and one for your video (it is possible to have them both on the same machine, but you have to move ports around). Likely you will have the network controller in the cloud to manage all of your sites. My suggestion is either one UFV controller for each site, or a cloud NVR, or have them all the cameras pointed back to your main site. This will all depend on the size of the upload pipes you have from all of your sites, and your download pipe at the main site. For the record, we looked at Meraki for a little bit, even got the free AP from them and went with Ubiquiti because of cost. We have had very few issues with Ubiquiti (honestly, we have more issues with the cameras). I can't say I've had to contact support or post on the forums for anything networking related; I have however posted quite frequently about camera issues.
We have all G2 cameras which are subpar to the G3 from what I've seen. But communication about software updates and issues has been poor from the UFV dev team, they have been acknowledged, and are getting better. The software/firmware has also been getting much better from the UFV dev team.
Thanks for the reply. Lots of good info there. For the video I am not 100% sure what I will do. We have 27 locations and will have about 31 by January.
Most will have 1 to 2 cameras. The issue with having all piped to Corporate is bandwidth (some locations are in T-1 so that is a no go), but also the stress on the router. At the moment we seem to have an issue with that. However we also would like to have a video wall, but honestly the person that needs it is at corporate only twice a week, so as long as we can open a live view with all cameras then we are golden I think. Your last point about the cameras and software has been the issue nagging in the back of my brain for a couple of days.
With Meraki I wouldn't have to worry about it, but we might purchase extra instead then. At the moment I am looking at a cost difference of $140K to $38K. Even with extra backups from Ubiquiti is still over 100K cheaper (this is a 6 year projection), and this does not take into count that I have to buy extra with Meraki as well to account for growth, because the equipment is almost double when I am not in negotiations time (that is another issue I have with Meraki). Dehcbad25 wrote: zheins wrote: I think the edgerouters can be connected in a VPN fashion. I know that the USG's can be connected via vpn, and the USG firmware is based on the ER firmware. Mind you the cameras you are looking at both work on different POE standards. The G3-Domes support both the 802.3at and 802.3af while the G3-UVCs are just 802.3at.
The G3 cameras come with injectors if you purchase them in packs smaller than 5 so that you can use whatever router/switch you please. You do not need to purchase an NVR, you can roll your own and this may be the smarter decision depending on how many cameras and how much retention of recordings you want. We have just shy of 50 cameras with 1TB of space on our UFV controller, this provides us 1 month retention of record on motion for all cameras (motion zones are constantly being tuned). I will also mention, that you will likely want two controllers here, one for your network, and one for your video (it is possible to have them both on the same machine, but you have to move ports around). Likely you will have the network controller in the cloud to manage all of your sites. My suggestion is either one UFV controller for each site, or a cloud NVR, or have them all the cameras pointed back to your main site. This will all depend on the size of the upload pipes you have from all of your sites, and your download pipe at the main site.
For the record, we looked at Meraki for a little bit, even got the free AP from them and went with Ubiquiti because of cost. We have had very few issues with Ubiquiti (honestly, we have more issues with the cameras). I can't say I've had to contact support or post on the forums for anything networking related; I have however posted quite frequently about camera issues. We have all G2 cameras which are subpar to the G3 from what I've seen. But communication about software updates and issues has been poor from the UFV dev team, they have been acknowledged, and are getting better. The software/firmware has also been getting much better from the UFV dev team.
Thanks for the reply. Lots of good info there. For the video I am not 100% sure what I will do.
We have 27 locations and will have about 31 by January. Most will have 1 to 2 cameras. The issue with having all piped to Corporate is bandwidth (some locations are in T-1 so that is a no go), but also the stress on the router.
At the moment we seem to have an issue with that. However we also would like to have a video wall, but honestly the person that needs it is at corporate only twice a week, so as long as we can open a live view with all cameras then we are golden I think. Your last point about the cameras and software has been the issue nagging in the back of my brain for a couple of days. With Meraki I wouldn't have to worry about it, but we might purchase extra instead then.
At the moment I am looking at a cost difference of $140K to $38K. Even with extra backups from Ubiquiti is still over 100K cheaper (this is a 6 year projection), and this does not take into count that I have to buy extra with Meraki as well to account for growth, because the equipment is almost double when I am not in negotiations time (that is another issue I have with Meraki). Sounds like it comes down to what is your time worth in comparison to the equipment. And is the extra configuration that you can do (sounds like you may NEED to do) worth it with the Ubiquiti gear over the Meraki? Of course, if you're spending so much time on the phone with Meraki, it sounds like you might already be spending a ton of time that you might just as well spend with Ubiquiti gear and save the cost difference in equipment. With the cameras, by the sounds of bandwidth, you may just be better off with an NVR per location.
Unless you want to get crafty and use a Raspberry Pi with an external drive (or large enough microSD card). As I said about the cameras and software, it's been getting better, and the transparency alone is worth it in my mind.
Zheins wrote:The Unifi switches (unless you need 802.3af for other devices) do 802.3at which all of the devices you've listed support. I've been happy with our USG-Pro-4 thus far, granted we've only had it for about two months. I was thnking on doing USG, and the 8 port switch.
This goes into our remote locations which have 2 computers, 2 Digital Signage (most of the time in Wifi), and about 10 miscellaneous devices like phones and tablets from the users). I was looking at the USG because of the smaller foot print since the locations don't have racks, so the USG-Pro-4 would look weird sitting under the desk.
I still haven't figured out what I would do for our main location yet. Not sure if the USG-Pro-4 would have enough juice (not sure if the MX80 does either). In the next 2 years I see us using 150 to 200 Mbps from the fiber, and we are connected now to 3 other networks thru VPN overseas.
Plus all the connections from the remote locations. I had a long rant about my time and I erased it:) No, while me as an employee is valued, my time is not worth it, and has no price on projects, otherwise we would have done other things. Put it simply, I either spend the time with this, or with something else. That said, I don't have enough hours in the day to complete everything, so not adding too much to my plate is a plus.
But Meraki is not configuration free, not support free, and I have been defending our initial cost into it at a pointless rate. Wifi is subpar on Z1, ME12 suck too (range is short, and we have a lot of steel). The fix for Wifi is to put MR32 on the celing, and hence why I am considering switching to Ubiquiti. Now, don't get me wrong. I like Meraki. There are things that it does very well.
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Their support is good. And it is easy to setup (Meraki to Meraki VPN is a breeze). But honestely, setting things up is not something you do daily. I have HP switches because a single Meraki was the cost of 3 HP, and the setup wasn't easy (I have VLANs, port aggregation and stacking) but it took a day.3 years ago. And want to know something funny?
The HP switch in the clunky interface can tell me the mac address of any device connected to a port. The Meraki can't. Not the MX80, not the Z1 (the switches can.but why not the other products). I replaced Linksys WRT54G (tomato and DD-wrt firmware on them) with the Z1. The Linksys had more reports on what is currently happening in the network, even though it does not do all the USG. Ultimately, if it was my decision I would not consider Meraki anymore. Too much money required as an investment.
It is a product for company that use a lot of contractors or more IT people and wants to set it and forget it. For me, since we have people that complain about any Internet issue (even though it might be self inflicted due to Watching Netflix, streaming on iTunes and playing CoD on the Xbox at the same time (and yes, this actually happened)) this ended as a rant in the end, and still long.probably due to having to do this today. You're right, setting things up does not happen often. My network has been pretty set and forget. We've got 3 UAP (not the pros and not AC), 1 Unifi 48 switch, 48 G2 cameras with a mix of all 4 (Micro, UVC, Dome, and Pro) and 1 USG-Pro-4. I will recommend that you weigh what you need against both USGs as there have been performance issues noted with the regular USG. Of course, I'm fighting with management about what they can see about user activity right now, which isn't a whole ton with Ubnt, sure you have DPI with the USG (not sure if you get it with the ER), but it isn't persistent with client devices after connect-disconnect-reconnect.
As for your main office, I feel the USG-Pro-4 would likely be sufficient - I do know that they've been working on an issue that has been limiting people from getting their full bandwidth because of a firmware bug. You may want to post concerns on the Ubnt Unifi forums and see what people and Ubnt reps have to say. As well, you may want to look at the here on Spiceworks.
And seeing your subnet post, you appear to be a one-man shop and may also want to check out the if you haven't already. BTW, good luck on changing subnets, here's to no issues! Zheins wrote: tvm9 wrote: You don't have to move ports around with the current default ports in the NVR software and Unifi controller if they share the same computer.
BTW, the UVC Pro cameras are discontinued. There are lots of options in the edgerouter CLI, so you can probably set up anything you can dream of. Sorry, you are corrent, I was mistaken about the ports. It's discovery that breaks. See: Also, I believe UFV is not currently supported on Ubuntu 16.04 while the Unifi Controller is supported. I recommend Ubuntu or Debian for the UFV machine as it just seems to constantly break on Windows (and only Win 7/8/8.1 are supported).
Totally missed that he was looking at UVC-Pro's. They are junk anyway, we have two and they constantly have issues. We've RMA'ed two of them and are waiting for the second to come back right now (just before the 1-year warranty runs out).
The G3-UVC's, from what I hear, are sufficient successors to the G2-UVC and UVC-Pro - or at least a good compromise of the two.Hmm, that's interesting. I have installed the controller on two Ubuntu NVRs without any issues with discovery, I wasn't really that impressed with the G3s over the G2s (except for build quality, and if you tweak the focus on the G2) until I discovered the magic zoom feature. Now I love the G3s. I've found Windows -a non dedicated machine- to be surprisingly stable (have only done 3 cameras). One gotcha I ran into once is that the software is 64-bit only.
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Publisher:. Date:. Size: 4966 KB. New Reviews It is quite difficult to find any computer users nowadays who do not need to use the web, for any purpose.
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