Hikvision
Hikvision Mobile Analog Camera AE-VC259T-S-2.1MM-UPPER Outlet
Regular price $16099 AUDUnit price
When TVI is the right choice
- Existing coax install with old analog cameras. Replace the cameras with HD-TVI, swap the DVR for a current Turbo HD model, keep the coax and mounting positions. Gets HD resolution at significantly lower install cost than rip-and-replace IP.
- Existing HD-TVI install with failed cameras. Direct replacement on the existing DVR — same coax, same channel.
- Long cable runs. HD-TVI runs 500 m on RG59 coax without amplifiers; IP is capped at 100 m on Cat6 (extenders available but adds complexity).
- Mixed analog + HD-TVI transition installs. Modern Hikvision Turbo HD DVRs auto-detect HD-TVI, AHD, and composite analog per channel — you can run new HD-TVI cameras alongside legacy analog on the same DVR during a staged upgrade.
When IP is the right choice instead
- New install with no existing coax. Run Cat6 per camera for single-cable PoE power and data, use an NVR. The modern architecture.
- Modern AI features matter. AcuSense, ColorVu, advanced analytics all came to IP first. TVI Turbo HD has some equivalents but the IP range is broader and updated more aggressively.
- Integration with VMS or access control. IP cameras integrate cleanly into Milestone, Genetec, Avigilon and other VMS platforms. TVI runs through a DVR which adds an integration layer.
How to choose between TVI cameras
Four axes:
1. Form factor. Turret for general perimeter — the most common HD-TVI buy. Bullet for long-range outdoor and pole-mount. Dome for indoor and weather-exposed commercial. PTZ for active wide-area.
2. Resolution. 2MP for budget and short-range; 4MP for general residential (most common); 5MP for higher-detail residential and commercial; 8MP / 4K for longer distances and identification work. Storage scales with resolution; confirm the existing DVR supports the resolution before specifying.
3. ColorVu vs standard IR. Selected Turbo HD models offer ColorVu (full-colour night vision via F1.0 aperture and supplementary white light) — useful for front-of-house identification.
4. AcuSense vs standard. Selected Turbo HD models offer AcuSense (on-camera AI human/vehicle classification, cuts false alerts up to 95%). Worth it for outdoor positions where alert volume otherwise becomes noise.
Cabling and install notes
- Coax type: RG59 (most common) or RG6 (longer runs, lower loss). Solid copper centre conductor, not copper-clad steel.
- Connectors: BNC twist-on or compression for video signal; cameras need separate 12 V DC or 24 V AC power at the camera position (HD-TVI doesn't carry power on the coax).
- Distance: 500 m on RG59 without amplifiers for 4MP/5MP. Longer runs need amplifiers or step up to RG6.
- Power: Plug-pack at the camera, multi-channel power box at a central comms point, or PoC (Power-over-Coax) extenders on selected installs. PoE doesn't work over coax.
Why buy from Security Cameras Australia
- Authorised Hikvision dealer · full Turbo HD warranty.
- Expert support · advice on HD-TVI vs IP decisions, DVR compatibility, cable specification, staged analog-to-HD-TVI upgrade paths.
- Price-match · free shipping · 30-day returns.
Shop the Hikvision TVI camera range
Browse the TVI range below, or see the Hikvision parent collection, DVRs for HD-TVI recorders, or NVRs for new IP installs.
Frequently Asked Questions about Hikvision TVI Cameras
What's the difference between HD-TVI and IP cameras?
What's the difference between HD-TVI and IP cameras?
Will Hikvision Turbo HD TVI cameras work with my existing DVR?
Will Hikvision Turbo HD TVI cameras work with my existing DVR?
Can I mix HD-TVI and IP cameras on the same recorder?
Can I mix HD-TVI and IP cameras on the same recorder?
Does HD-TVI support AcuSense or ColorVu?
Does HD-TVI support AcuSense or ColorVu?
Should I switch from HD-TVI to IP for my next upgrade?
Should I switch from HD-TVI to IP for my next upgrade?