Geovision 125-PTZ580W-IR00 PTZ IP Camera
Overview
The Geovision 125-PTZ580W-IR00 is a compact indoor PTZ camera delivering 2880x1620 resolution with 5x optical zoom—designed for facilities where space constraints and power budgets demand a single-cable deployment. The camera captures smooth live view at 30 fps across three simultaneous video streams, making it suitable for access control points, retail environments, warehouses, and office perimeters where pan-tilt-zoom capability and low-light performance matter but mounting real estate is limited. Integrated IR illumination eliminates dependency on external lighting infrastructure, allowing the camera to function reliably in complete darkness. PoE (802.3af) operation reduces installation complexity: one cable delivers both power and data, cutting labor costs in retrofit scenarios or locations where electrical infrastructure is constrained.
Compatibility
The 125-PTZ580W-IR00 integrates with standard ONVIF-compliant network video management platforms. It supports flexible mounting via Geovision accessory brackets—wall mounts (GV-Mount211-1, GV-Mount211P), pole brackets (GV-Mount420, GV-Mount440-1), pendant mounts (GV-Mount107), corner mounts (GV-Mount300-2, GV-Mount310-2), and junction boxes (GV-Mount212-1, GV-Mount212P)—allowing deployment across varied facility layouts. The camera operates within standard enterprise IP surveillance architectures using H.264 or H.265 compression, compatible with both legacy and modern VMS deployments.
Installation Notes
Physical footprint: Φ120 × 334 mm (4.72" × 13.15") for the pendant configuration, weighing 0.74 kg (1.63 lb)—compact enough for discrete placement where larger housings would interfere with aesthetics or sightlines. PoE draws from the 802.3af budget (13W max typical), suitable for standard network switches without dedicated PoE+ infrastructure. Focal length range 2.7–13.5 mm with F/1.2 maximum aperture supports operation in mixed lighting and semi-dark environments. Verify PoE switch capacity when deploying multiple units; daisy-chaining or insufficient power budgeting is a common commissioning failure in multi-camera rollouts.