It looks like you need the Halo 3 benefit which may be useful now and in the future. You could request a home visit by a tech expert to sort out your issues.
Its like so many other issues on this forum, its much more difficult to explain to other people, than it would actually be to be onsite.
You may find the BT tech experts are not familiar with changing the settings.
To be honest, I would be more inclined to change the IP addresses of the cameras, remembering of course to alter the camera settings for each camera, within Blue Iris. Because if the home hub has to be reset to factory default, you would lose any changes you had made.
Can you clarify if you intend setting the IP addresses on the cameras themselves (static addressing) or by address reservation using the hub.
@papagray1706 wrote:
any recommendations for ip address per camera ?
Depends on how many cameras, but you could start at 192.168.1.40 upwards to a maximum of 192.168.1.63
These are outside of the DHCP range of the home hub and would not clash with any devices.
Do them one at a time, and remember to alter the video settings page for the camera, within Blue Iris, you should then see the camera appear on the Blue Iris console.
I run Blue Iris as a service, and use the console or web browser to view the cameras. I have a mixture of H264 and MJPEG cameras. For the H264 I use direct to disk recording, to save CPU usage.
thank you for your help will be changing the cameras i did alter the dhcp to 192.168.1.2 to 192.168.1.253 on the custom do you recommend leaving it as normal setup and just changing camera by camera ie 192.168.1.40 ? as that is the start of dhcp range, sorry i get very tired quickly the pain of post polio
You need to set the DHCP range of the hub back to default so that the cameras are outside of the range.
Also turn off Smart Setup as that causes untold problems.