The 510WA is slightly larger than the 810A. The 810A is smaller than I expected, at least judging by the photos and marketing materials you see online, it’s decent in weight, and again feels pretty robust. The 820A is about the size of a softball / small grapefruit and feels well made. I would assume anyone buying these would want POE anyway, but just in case! The 510WA did come with a psu, and will not work with POE (this didn’t bother me, I wanted wireless in this instance). There looks to be a provision for powering them via mains, but it’s not included. Neither the RLC-820A nor the RLC-810A came with a psu, so keep this in mind. ), and a grommet/assembly to seal the cable connection. I don’t want to go through full unboxing details here, there are plenty of those on Youtube, but in a nutshell they all came with a manual, ethernet cable, hardware for mounting (pair of screws and rawplugs, template FIxing the Reolink Camera Dispaly in Home-Assistant RMTP/Sub The boxes came well wrapped and securely packaged. ![]() In this post, I’m going to walk you through the simplest (IMO) way to connect them up and get them running. I decided to order three different Reolink variants, as well as a Netgear POE+ switch to power it all. I posted previously ( here) what I was looking for in a camera and my reasons for ordering etc. So my cameras finally arrived from the far east, and I was anxious to get them up and running.
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