brokensword
Electrical
- Feb 28, 2019
- 5
Hello,
I have a pond and once had an underwater PoE camera hooked up. Well, it developed two problems in the year and a half and then the camera died. I don't want to keep replacing the unit as it's not cheap, so I've been working on a 'reusable' underwater housing where I can put in inexpensive PoE cameras as they break, which seems likely. In working out the design, I'm using pvc, glass for a front lens, and a customized endcap with rubber o ring + latches. Now, I'm using flex pvc (3/4") as a shield tube at that end port as I need to get the ethernet cord from the cam and up to the surface where it connects with a coupler and then to the feed to the PoE injector.
The camera will be in a freshwater pond where water temps will range from 35F to 85F, approx 20" down. The camera is a Reolink 5mp security PoE cam which gets power from a PoE injector, then on to the computer. Since ruining the original ethernet connector (looks like water got in), I've now got a waterk-proof taped solid lead from cam out of the housing and to the coupling above water.
I've had multiple issues with leaking and couldn't understand until maybe, just yesterday, had a thought; I'd put silicone on every seam, even the ones where I glued pvc to pvc and where the flex pvc attaches, then siliconed the end of the plex pvc to make it air tight. (I'm aware silicone isn't a good 'stick' for pvc but have it so the outside water pressure should push against any silicone and force it tighter. If I don't mess with it, it stays attached and functionable. The one time I DID mess with it, I got leakage). I still got water, not a lot, but apparently enough to ruin an ethernet cord end. Fixing this, I then mounted the cam back in the case and let it do it's thing without any silicone to cap off the flex pvc end, effectively allowing air to get in and out. Yesterday, I was going to rework the silicone and when I opened the diy case, I had a teaspoon of water come out. Now, this is OUT of the water. Sooo, long story short, I think the cam is taking humidity out of the air and it's pooling up inside the case. I expect this may account for my earlier water inside, thinking then it was from faulty joints/sealing. I DO have a packet of silicone absorbent granules inside, just for the purpose of taking out any humidity. I assumed once gone, the air would then NOT deposit out and ruin the cam/cam cord connection.
So question for anyone having dealt with moisture in this sense, how do I insure I won't get such a buildup of water? Do I have to manually extract the air right after gluing/latching? I've heard to put in CO2/Nitrogen but I don't have easy access to this and am just looking for some sort of 'trick' that will keep the camera inside dry for years (or yearly when it dies on me, again!). I need to be able to get in and out of this housing, hence why I'm trying to overcome the problem. I know I could seal it up permanently but I might as well just go the expensive UW cam route in that case.
I've also wondered if this ethernet cable (supposedly exterior/bury usage) is letting water in through it's jacket and if that is something I need address.
Any ideas? I know it's not a typical subject--I've checked and googled ad nauseum--but any insights to either my build or my current issue would be much appreciated!
Thank you in advance, esp for anyone who read all the way through!
I have a pond and once had an underwater PoE camera hooked up. Well, it developed two problems in the year and a half and then the camera died. I don't want to keep replacing the unit as it's not cheap, so I've been working on a 'reusable' underwater housing where I can put in inexpensive PoE cameras as they break, which seems likely. In working out the design, I'm using pvc, glass for a front lens, and a customized endcap with rubber o ring + latches. Now, I'm using flex pvc (3/4") as a shield tube at that end port as I need to get the ethernet cord from the cam and up to the surface where it connects with a coupler and then to the feed to the PoE injector.
The camera will be in a freshwater pond where water temps will range from 35F to 85F, approx 20" down. The camera is a Reolink 5mp security PoE cam which gets power from a PoE injector, then on to the computer. Since ruining the original ethernet connector (looks like water got in), I've now got a waterk-proof taped solid lead from cam out of the housing and to the coupling above water.
I've had multiple issues with leaking and couldn't understand until maybe, just yesterday, had a thought; I'd put silicone on every seam, even the ones where I glued pvc to pvc and where the flex pvc attaches, then siliconed the end of the plex pvc to make it air tight. (I'm aware silicone isn't a good 'stick' for pvc but have it so the outside water pressure should push against any silicone and force it tighter. If I don't mess with it, it stays attached and functionable. The one time I DID mess with it, I got leakage). I still got water, not a lot, but apparently enough to ruin an ethernet cord end. Fixing this, I then mounted the cam back in the case and let it do it's thing without any silicone to cap off the flex pvc end, effectively allowing air to get in and out. Yesterday, I was going to rework the silicone and when I opened the diy case, I had a teaspoon of water come out. Now, this is OUT of the water. Sooo, long story short, I think the cam is taking humidity out of the air and it's pooling up inside the case. I expect this may account for my earlier water inside, thinking then it was from faulty joints/sealing. I DO have a packet of silicone absorbent granules inside, just for the purpose of taking out any humidity. I assumed once gone, the air would then NOT deposit out and ruin the cam/cam cord connection.
So question for anyone having dealt with moisture in this sense, how do I insure I won't get such a buildup of water? Do I have to manually extract the air right after gluing/latching? I've heard to put in CO2/Nitrogen but I don't have easy access to this and am just looking for some sort of 'trick' that will keep the camera inside dry for years (or yearly when it dies on me, again!). I need to be able to get in and out of this housing, hence why I'm trying to overcome the problem. I know I could seal it up permanently but I might as well just go the expensive UW cam route in that case.
I've also wondered if this ethernet cable (supposedly exterior/bury usage) is letting water in through it's jacket and if that is something I need address.
Any ideas? I know it's not a typical subject--I've checked and googled ad nauseum--but any insights to either my build or my current issue would be much appreciated!
Thank you in advance, esp for anyone who read all the way through!