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Camera Mounts & Brackets

Camera mounts and brackets cover the hardware between the wall and the camera — wall extension arms for bullets and PTZs, pole mounts for fence-line and carpark positions, corner mounts for external building corners, pendant and pole-to-ceiling adapters for high-ceiling commercial, junction boxes for cable management at the camera, and the gaskets, plates and weatherproof adapters that hold the install together. Specifying the right mount matters as much as specifying the camera: a mount that doesn't match the camera's bolt pattern needs shimming, a mount that breaks the camera's weatherproof gasket compromises the IP rating, and a mount mismatched to install geometry creates field-of-view problems that can't be fixed without re-mounting.

Security Cameras Australia stocks the full range across brand-specific mounts (Hikvision, Axis, Hanwha, HiLook, IDIS, TruVision) and universal accessories. Every mount is genuine Australian stock with manufacturer warranty.

For brand-specific accessory ranges see Hikvision accessories, Axis accessories. For complementary categories see power supplies and networking equipment.

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What's in the camera mounts and brackets range

Wall mounts

For cameras that need to extend off a flat wall surface. Typical for bullet cameras and PTZs that have a wall-mount cable entry. Sub-types:

  • Short wall arms (50-200 mm extension) — standard residential and commercial.
  • Long wall arms (300-600 mm extension) — for cameras that need to clear awnings, eaves or downpipes.
  • Adjustable-arm wall mounts — for cameras needing angle adjustment beyond the camera's built-in gimbal range.

Pole mounts

For installs on metal poles — carpark light poles, fence-line poles, dedicated camera poles. Sub-types:

  • Strap-mount adapters — quick-install with stainless straps, suitable for round poles.
  • Bracket-and-bolt pole mounts — bolted directly through the pole for permanent installs.
  • Pole-to-wall adapters — converts a wall-mount camera bracket to pole installation.

Corner mounts

For external building corners where standard wall geometry doesn't work — the camera mounts diagonally into the corner, looking out along both wall directions. Useful for buildings where covering two perpendicular external walls with a single camera matters.

Pendant and ceiling mounts

For high-ceiling commercial installs where the camera needs to hang down from the structure:

  • Pendant mounts for PTZ cameras in retail, warehousing, hospitality.
  • Recessed ceiling mounts for flush installation in suspended ceilings.
  • Ceiling-to-pendant adapters for installing a wall-mount camera in a ceiling-down configuration.

Junction boxes

Integrated cable management at the camera position. Houses the cable termination, surplus cable loop and any local power supply behind the camera, keeping the install clean and weather-sealed:

  • Surface-mount junction boxes mounted between camera and wall.
  • In-wall junction boxes recessed for clean visual finish.
  • Pole-mount junction boxes sized for pole-strap installation.

Specialised mounts and adapters

  • Mast mounts for marine, vehicle and temporary installs.
  • Universal adapter plates for fitting cameras to non-standard surfaces.
  • Sun shields for cameras in extreme exposure (west-facing in summer, white roofs).
  • Gaskets and replacement seals for weatherproofing maintenance.

How to choose the right mount

Four practical decisions:

1. Camera mounting pattern

Cameras don't all share the same mounting bolt pattern. Brand-specific mounts (Hikvision-to-Hikvision, Axis-to-Axis) drop in cleanly. Cross-brand or universal mounts typically work but check the bolt pattern against the camera's mounting plate — some need adapter plates or longer bolts.

2. Install position and geometry

  • Flat external wall → wall mount.
  • External corner → corner mount (saves running an additional camera).
  • Metal pole → pole mount (strap or bolt depending on permanence).
  • High commercial ceiling → pendant or pole-down.
  • Soffit or awning underside → ceiling/pendant mount.

3. Environment and IP rating

The camera's IP66/IP67 rating depends on the matched gasket and cable gland. Genuine brand-specific mounts preserve the rating; universal mounts may need supplementary sealing. For coastal and marine installs, specify stainless steel hardware to avoid corrosion.

4. Mechanical considerations

  • Vibration sensitivity. PTZs at zoom are hyper-sensitive — mount on solid masonry or structural steel, avoid pole mounts unless properly braced.
  • Load and wind exposure. Long-arm wall mounts and exposed pole positions need mechanical design for wind load — the camera's specified-mount maximum.
  • Cable routing. Junction boxes simplify cable management; without them, expose cable runs need separate weatherproof conduit.

Genuine brand mounts vs universal

Honest framing:

  • Genuine brand-matched mounts (Hikvision mount for a Hikvision camera, Axis mount for an Axis camera) preserve the camera's warranty, match the bolt pattern exactly, maintain the IP66/IP67 gasket integrity, and drop in cleanly. For warranty-critical commercial and government installs, always genuine.
  • Universal mounts are typically physically compatible and cost less, but at owner risk for warranty if the third-party mount breaks the camera housing seal. For residential and lower-stakes installs, universal mounts are common.

The cost difference is rarely enough to justify the warranty risk on commercial installs. For residential, the call is owner's choice.

Common install mistakes

  • Short-arm mount where long is needed. Mounting a camera against an eave or awning blocks the field of view downward. Always check the mount extension against the install geometry before specifying.
  • Pole mount on a flexing pole. A pole that visibly flexes in wind translates to camera image shake — significant at zoom. Brace the pole, use a heavier-gauge pole, or specify a wall position instead.
  • Wrong gasket on weatherproof junction box. A gasket that doesn't seat properly lets water into the junction box and ultimately into the camera. Confirm gasket match before specifying.
  • Universal mount without adapter plate. A "near-fit" bolt pattern with M6 bolts where the camera needs M5, or a 50 mm spacing where the camera needs 48 mm, looks fine until the install — then needs adapter plates.

Why buy from Security Cameras Australia

  • Authorised dealer for Hikvision, Axis, Hanwha, HiLook, IDIS, TruVision — genuine mounts with manufacturer warranty.
  • Expert support · advice on mount selection for non-standard installs, brand-cross compatibility, weatherproofing preservation, vibration management.
  • Price-match · free shipping · 30-day returns.

Shop the camera mounts & brackets range

Browse below, or see brand-specific accessory ranges: Hikvision, Axis. For complementary categories: power supplies, networking equipment.

Frequently Asked Questions about Camera Mounts & Brackets

Will a universal mount fit any camera?

Usually but not always — most cameras share standardised bolt patterns within a brand and between major manufacturers. Universal mounts cover the common patterns; "near-fit" patterns (M5 vs M6 bolts, 48 mm vs 50 mm spacing) need adapter plates. For warranty-critical installs, genuine brand-matched mounts are safer. For residential, universal mounts work in most cases — check the bolt pattern against the camera spec before commit.

Will a third-party mount affect my camera warranty?

Potentially yes if the mount stresses the camera housing, breaks the IP66/IP67 gasket seal, or compromises the cable entry weatherproofing. Hikvision, Axis and other manufacturers' warranties assume genuine mounting hardware. For commercial installs where warranty matters, specify brand-matched mounts. For residential at lower stakes, universal mounts are widely used at owner risk.

Pole mount or wall mount for a long-range bullet camera?

Depends on the position. Wall mount is more stable and preserves zoom-image quality but limits position to where a building wall is available. Pole mount is necessary for fence-line, carpark, and free-standing positions but introduces vibration sensitivity — at long zoom, even modest pole flex translates to image shake. For long-range zoom or PTZ work, prefer wall or solid-masonry pillar; for fixed-focal-length bullets at moderate range, pole mount is fine.

Do I need a junction box at the camera?

For outdoor cable terminations, almost always yes — the junction box houses the cable termination, surplus cable loop, and any local power supply behind the camera in a weather-sealed enclosure. Without one, exposed cable terminations are vulnerable to UV degradation, water ingress and rodent damage. For indoor installs with terminations inside the ceiling space, a junction box is optional but still cleaner.

What's the difference between IP66 and IP67 for an outdoor mount?

IP66 means dust-tight and protected against powerful water jets; IP67 means dust-tight and protected against temporary immersion. For typical outdoor installs (rain exposure, hose-down cleaning), IP66 is sufficient. For installs subject to actual flooding or extreme pressure cleaning, IP67. For Australian residential and commercial outdoor positions, IP66 covers the typical exposure. For marine, sub-tropical flood-prone, or industrial wash-down positions, IP67.

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