TP-Link VIGI Solar Camera Guide
Solar Guide
When solar is usually the right answer
Solar usually makes sense when the site has no practical mains power and the owner still wants CCTV at a gate, paddock entrance, detached storage area, temporary site, or fence line. It is most useful where the camera count is low, the scene is important enough to justify remote coverage, and the owner is realistic about sunlight, battery, and maintenance.
What the solar side actually has to support
| Part of the system | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Solar panel size | Panel capacity affects how comfortably the system recharges through variable weather. |
| Battery size | Battery capacity affects overnight and low-sun resilience. |
| Camera power draw | Higher expectations around lighting, 4G, or more active use can increase power demand. |
| Mounting direction and shading | A badly placed panel can undo an otherwise sensible camera choice. |
| Viewing behaviour | Frequent live view and heavier event traffic can make a small remote system work harder. |
That is why solar should not be reduced to "camera plus panel". It is a small off-grid design question.
Sample scenarios
A caravan-park entry gate with no easy power trench
If the gate is far enough from the main office that trenching is awkward, a solar-supported camera can be a sensible answer if the aim is to understand arrivals, after-hours gate use, and casual incidents rather than run a heavy central recording environment.
The system works best when the site is designed around one clear coverage task instead of expecting a small remote camera to answer every question about the whole frontage.
A detached farm machinery shed
If the owner mainly wants to know whether anyone has approached the shed, whether doors have been opened, and whether a vehicle has pulled up nearby, solar CCTV can work well as long as the panel and battery path are sized sensibly and the mounting is not shaded all day.
If the owner really wants several cameras and long central retention, a bridge back to the main building may still be the better design.
When not to force a solar answer
- If the site needs several remote cameras instead of one or two, the better answer may be bridge plus central power rather than many isolated solar units.
- If the panel position is heavily shaded or seasonally unreliable, the design should be reviewed carefully before buying.
- If the owner expects constant live viewing and heavy review from a small solar deployment, the expectations may be out of line with the power budget.
Relevant SecurityWholesalers Categories and Products
These are the VIGI solar and remote-site references worth reviewing first.
- TP-Link VIGI Solar Panel & Camera Systems - Main remote solar category for VIGI on SecurityWholesalers.
- VIGI InSight S345-4G - Useful reference when solar and 4G overlap on a remote site.
- TP-Link Range Extenders and Bridge Kits - Worth comparing when a solar-only answer may not be the best remote-site path.
Sources and Further Reading
Frequently Asked Questions
-
When is a solar CCTV camera actually worth using?
It is worth using when the site has no practical mains power and still needs CCTV on a low-camera-count remote position such as a gate, detached shed, or temporary compound.
-
Is a solar camera better than trenching power?
Not always. If trenching is practical and the site wants a larger or more permanent CCTV layout, wired power and networking may still be the better long-term answer.
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Do I need 4G with solar?
Often, but not always. Some solar sites still use bridge links rather than cellular. The right answer depends on network path, line of sight, and what the owner wants to review.
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What is the biggest mistake on solar CCTV?
The biggest mistake is forgetting that the panel, battery, mounting, and power draw need to be designed together instead of assuming every solar label means the same thing.
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Can I run several cameras from one small solar setup?
That should be assessed carefully. One or two remote cameras may be realistic, but larger multi-camera remote systems often need a different design approach.
Related Pages
TP-Link VIGI 4G Camera Guide
Use this guide when the site may need a VIGI 4G camera instead of ordinary PoE CCTV.
TP-Link VIGI Point-to-Point and Remote Site Guide
Use this guide when VIGI needs to cover a remote point or a detached building instead of a normal single-building site.
Common TP-Link VIGI Setup Problems
Use this page to narrow down common VIGI setup problems before replacing the wrong part.
















