Monitors & Displays
Showing Results for Monitors & Displays
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TP-Link
SKU: HX220
TP-Link HX220 AX1800 Whole Home Mesh Wi-Fi AP
- AX1800 dual-band Wi-Fi 6 mesh access point — EasyMesh R2
- 574 Mbps on 2.4 GHz plus 1,201 Mbps on 5 GHz combined
- Standards-based mesh interoperates with other vendors
$69.99 $61.99 Save $8.00 -
TP-Link
SKU: UB500
TP-Link UB500 Bluetooth 5.0 Nano USB Adapter
- Nano USB Bluetooth 5.0 adapter — adds BT to desktops and laptops
- Compact nano form factor minimizes port obstruction
- Drop-in BT 5.0 connectivity for newer peripherals
$25.99 -
Veracity
SKU: VPSAN-6-PLUS-US
Veracity VPSAN-6-PLUS-US 2U Video Wall Controller
- 2U video wall controller with six independent 4K outputs
- Decoupled output streams without refresh-rate contention
- Rack-mount form factor for control room integration
$10,800.00 $7,814.99 Save $2,985.01 -
Wasp
SKU: 633808471521
Wasp 633808471521 Wasp WPD720 POS Pole Display USB
- USB-powered connection eliminates the need for a separate power supply at the POS station.
- Compatible with NCR Aloha, Micros, and any POS platform supporting USB HID pole displays.
- Mounts on a standard 1-inch pole; position 48–60 inches high for optimal customer sightlines.
$249.00 $225.99 Save $23.01
Monitors & Displays
Surveillance monitors and displays provide reliable visual output for control rooms, security desks, and video walls. Commercial-grade displays are designed for continuous operation, consistent image clarity, and integration with modern video management systems.
Plan Your Deployment
- Screen size and viewing distance requirements
- 24/7 operation and duty cycle expectations
- Resolution compatibility with NVR or VMS output
- Mounting method (desk, wall, video wall configuration)
- Input types and connection standards (HDMI, DisplayPort, etc.)
Monitors & Displays — Engineering-Grade Video Recording & Storage for Commercial Deployments
This category covers 45 working models of monitors & displays sourced manufacturer-direct or through channel-direct US distribution. Build the rest of your system around the architectural choices below — compatibility, environmental rating, and lifecycle decisions made here propagate through every downstream component you specify.
What to Look For
Channel count and supported resolution define the recorder's ceiling. A 16-channel NVR rated for 8MP per channel is a different product from a 16-channel rated for 2MP — the latter throttles your future camera upgrades. Read the per-channel and aggregate bitrate ceilings (often expressed in Mbps incoming/outgoing). A safe rule: target an NVR with at least 50% headroom on bitrate, and channel count one step above current need.
Storage architecture matters as much as raw capacity. Surveillance-grade drives (WD Purple, Seagate SkyHawk) are tuned for 24/7 write loads and a small concurrent read count; desktop drives fail in months under the same workload. RAID levels affect both fault tolerance and write performance — RAID 5 for general retention with one drive of redundancy, RAID 6 or 10 for larger arrays where two-drive failure isn't recoverable in RAID 5.
VMS choice locks you into a vendor ecosystem more than any camera decision will. Genetec, Milestone, Hanwha Wisenet WAVE, Avigilon, and Axis Camera Station differ on per-camera licensing cost, third-party integrations (access control, video analytics, identity), and analyst workflow. Demo the operator interface with the people who will actually use it before committing — analyst frustration drives more replacements than technical limits.
Plan for off-site or redundant storage. Single-site recorders fail or get stolen. Cloud-archive licensing, NAS replication, and multi-site federation become important the moment a chain customer asks for centralized investigation tools. Recorders that bury cloud-archive in a per-camera SaaS bundle drive long-term costs much higher than a one-time NAS expansion.
Key Specs in This Category
| Spec | Available Options |
|---|---|
| Resolution | 2MP, 5MP |
| Connectivity | Wi-Fi |
| Power | PoE, AC/DC, PoE+, Battery |
| Storage | microSD |
| Type | NVR, Monitor, DVR, Accessory, Mobile Computer, Intercom, Cable, UPS |
| Durability | Indoor |
Top Brands in This Category
Frequently Asked Questions
How many drives can fit in a typical NVR?
Compact desktop NVRs hold 1-2 drives — typically capping around 16TB usable. Mid-size rack-mount NVRs hold 4-8 drives, often 32-64TB usable in RAID 5/6. Enterprise NVRs and dedicated storage servers scale to 16+ drives with hot-swap and JBOD expansion. Match drive count to your retention math; running out of drive bays mid-project means a recorder replacement, not just a drive add.
Should I use surveillance-grade or enterprise drives?
Surveillance-grade drives (WD Purple, Seagate SkyHawk) are correct for most NVRs — they're tuned for many concurrent write streams from cameras with low read count. Enterprise drives (WD Gold, Seagate IronWolf Pro, Exos) are appropriate for high-channel-count systems with many concurrent investigator clients reading recorded video. Avoid desktop drives entirely; they're rated for 8x5 light duty and fail quickly in 24/7 NVR loads.
What's the difference between an NVR and a hybrid recorder?
An NVR records exclusively from IP cameras over Ethernet. A hybrid (or tribrid) recorder accepts both IP cameras and legacy analog/HD-over-coax cameras on dedicated BNC inputs, useful for migrations where you can't replace coax runs immediately. Hybrid units cost more per channel and add complexity; if you're starting fresh or fully replacing analog, a pure NVR is simpler and almost always cheaper per usable channel.
Can I expand storage on an existing NVR?
Most rack NVRs and storage servers accept storage expansion via empty drive bays, eSATA/SAS JBOD shelves, or iSCSI targets. Desktop NVRs with only 1-2 bays generally do not. Before buying, check the recorder's supported expansion architecture and the maximum raw and usable capacity — many sub-$2,000 NVRs cap below the 24TB threshold most projects need within three years.
Do I need a dedicated VMS workstation?
For a few cameras and one or two simultaneous operators, the NVR's built-in client interface is enough. For 32+ cameras, multiple investigator seats, video walls, or wall-of-monitors operations, a dedicated workstation (or thin client) running the VMS client is standard. The workstation needs adequate GPU decode capacity for the simultaneous stream count — H.265 decode acceleration is essential at scale.
Need help choosing? Talk to a Senior Specialist — direct line 877-277-7147 or request a quote.