Security Cameras Australia
Hikvision 6MP ColorVu 3.0 8-Camera Turret Kit | BYO HDD
In stock (478 units)Sale price $3,86831 AUD Regular price $4,07191Unit price- $189.24 off
Security Cameras Australia
Hikvision 6MP AcuSense 10-Camera Turret Kit | 4TB HDD Pre-Installed
In stock (22 units)Sale price $3,59565 AUD Regular price $3,78489Unit price IDIS
IDIS Lite 5MP Outdoor Turret, 2.7-13.5MM MZ, IR, IP67, IK10, NDAA
In stock (1609 units)Regular price $35199 AUDUnit priceHikvision
Hikvision COLORVU3.0 2CD2387G3-LIS2UY-SRB-2.8MM 8MP Strobe Audio Turret, 2.8MM, IR30M MIC
In stock (7 units)Sale price $51999 AUD Regular price $67430Unit priceHikvision
Hikvision COLORVU3.0 2CD2387G3-LIS2UY-SRB Black 8MP Strobe Audio Turret, 2.8MM, IR30M MIC,
In stock (70 units)Sale price $51999 AUD Regular price $67980Unit priceHikvision
Hikvision Thermographic TD1228T-2-G1-T3A Bi-Spectrum Turret Camera IP67
Very low stock (2 units)Regular price $1,88599 AUDUnit priceHikvision
Hikvision ColorVu 3.0 DS-2CD2387G3-LIS2UY-SL 8 Megapixel 4K Network Camera - Colour - Turret
Very low stock (1 unit)Regular price $58599 AUDUnit priceSecurity Cameras Australia
HiLook 6MP Mixed 4-Camera Kit (2x Turret + 2x Dome) | 2TB HDD Pre-Installed
In stock (7 units)Sale price $70580 AUD Regular price $74295Unit price
Key features of turret cameras
- Separated IR LED housing — the infrared array sits in its own housing apart from the lens, so IR doesn't bounce off the front glass back into the sensor. This is the main reason turret night images come out cleaner than dome night images, particularly in dusty or insect-rich outdoor conditions.
- Ball-and-socket mount — pan and tilt by hand to aim the lens (typically full 360° horizontal, 0–75° vertical tilt depending on model). Once locked, the position holds.
- Compact form for eaves and corners — mounts directly to walls, soffits and corners without separate brackets in most cases.
- 4MP to 4K resolution options across the range.
- AcuSense AI on Hikvision Pro Series turrets, ColorVu full-colour night vision on supported models, Strobe & Siren active deterrence on selected outdoor models.
- IP66/67 weatherproofing on outdoor models; IK10 vandal-resistance on selected vandal-rated turrets.
- Built-in microphone on most current models for ambient audio capture.
- PoE 802.3af/at — single Cat6 cable for power and data.
Why turret specifically — and where it's the right call
The engineering case for turret is simple: the IR LEDs are physically separated from the lens, so the infrared light doesn't reflect off the front glass at night. Dome cameras put both the lens and the LEDs behind one bubble — when a spider builds a web on the glass, when dust settles, when condensation forms on a humid Queensland morning, the IR reflects straight back into the sensor and the night image goes milky. Turrets sidestep that because the IR and the lens see the world through separate openings.
Practically, turrets earn their keep on:
- Eaves-mounted residential perimeter — front door, driveway view, side gate, backyard. The downward angle and the separated IR housing are exactly the combination this scenario wants.
- Wall-mounted commercial entry — shop frontages, office entries, reception areas. Compact enough to look professional, robust enough for street-facing duty.
- Corner-mount perimeter — at the intersection of two walls, a turret covers both lines.
- Carport, garage, covered outdoor areas — the form factor handles intermittent rain ingress and the limited overhead clearance well.
How to choose between cameras in the turret range
Four axes, in roughly the order most buyers decide:
1. Brand. Hikvision has the broadest turret range with AcuSense, ColorVu, Strobe & Siren and the longer warranty. HiLook is the value sub-brand — same form factor, fewer advanced features, lower price. Axis for professional / NDAA-compliant work (Q-series for premium professional, P-series for commercial workhorse). IDIS for NDAA-compliant Korean engineering with DirectIP zero-configuration. Neither Hikvision nor HiLook is NDAA-compliant — for government work see the NDAA-compliant range.
2. Resolution. 4MP for interior / short-range; 6MP for general residential and small-commercial perimeter (the most common right answer); 8MP / 4K for longer viewing distances and plate-capture-adjacent work. Match to viewing distance, not the biggest number on the box.
3. Camera technology. AcuSense is the most impactful turret add-on for most installs — at this form factor every wind-blown leaf, every overnight possum, every passing headlight triggers a notification on a standard camera; AcuSense cuts that noise. ColorVu earns its keep where night-time colour identification matters (vehicle colour, clothing). Strobe & Siren for active deterrence on problem zones.
4. Connectivity. PoE wired for almost every professional install. Wi-Fi turret cameras exist but are uncommon — for wireless residential the wireless cameras collection is the right starting point.
Where to mount turret cameras
- Eaves and soffits — the classic residential perimeter mount. Aim down 30–45° to cover ground from about 2 m forward of the building out to roughly 8–10 m.
- Wall mid-height (typically 2.5–3 m AGL) — the standard commercial entry mount. Aim slightly downward to cover the approach.
- Wall-corner brackets — at the intersection of two walls, a single turret covers both lines if positioned high enough.
- Carport / garage ceilings — flush-style mount on a flat ceiling works for covered outdoor approaches.
- Pole mounts are possible with dedicated bracket adaptors but bullets are usually a better fit for pole-mounted long-range views.
Mounting height matters: too low and a face passes above the frame; too high and identification becomes pure top-of-head footage. 2.5–3 m AGL aimed down 30° is the residential default for facial-recognition-distance work.
Is turret the right form factor for your install?
Turret is the right call when: the mount is eaves, corner, or mid-height wall; the view is general perimeter or entry-point at typical 4–8 m distances; the install is outdoor and night-time IR matters.
Look at bullet instead when: the view is long and narrow (long driveway, fence line, single-aspect plate capture), and the camera will be pole- or eaves-mounted at a fixed angle. Bullets have longer-range IR, narrower viewing angles by default, and integrated sun shields that help in direct WA / NT light.
Look at dome instead when: the install is indoor with a ceiling-flush mount, or aesthetics are a primary concern (commercial reception, retail interior). Domes have the IR-reflection problem in dusty outdoor conditions, but indoors with clean glass that problem goes away.
Look at PTZ instead when: the view is wide-area (carpark, yard, perimeter sweep) and you need active monitoring with motorised pan / tilt / zoom — not just a fixed angle.
Why buy from Security Cameras Australia
- Authorised Australian dealer — genuine turret cameras across every brand, full manufacturer warranty, not grey import.
- Expert support — pre- and post-purchase technical advice, including the AcuSense / ColorVu / Strobe & Siren decision and the mounting-height question.
- Price-match guarantee — competitive pricing across the range.
- Free shipping — fast delivery across Australia.
- 30-day returns — a satisfaction guarantee on every camera.
Shop the turret range
Browse the turret range below, or talk to us about specifying a system. Tell us the mounting locations and the viewing scenes, and we'll point you to the right turret model — or, if turret isn't actually the right form factor for your install, the right alternative.
Frequently Asked Questions about Turret Security Cameras
What is a turret camera and what makes it different from a dome?
What is a turret camera and what makes it different from a dome?
Where should I mount a turret camera?
Where should I mount a turret camera?
Turret or bullet — which should I pick?
Turret or bullet — which should I pick?
What resolution and AI features are available on turret cameras?
What resolution and AI features are available on turret cameras?
How hard is it to install a turret camera?
How hard is it to install a turret camera?