CCTV systems in warehouses and factories often look good on paper,
yet fail when you actually need clear evidence. The problem is rarely the number of cameras—it’s the layout, angles, lighting, and recording plan.
This guide shows a practical approach you can follow to reduce blind spots and get usable footage.
Before you place any camera, define what “success” looks like for your site.
This decides where you need detail coverage and where wide coverage is enough.
Most incidents in industrial sites happen in a few predictable areas.
Cover these first, then expand.
Blind spots don’t happen randomly. They usually come from the same layout mistakes.
Here are quick fixes that work.
Cameras are too high → Lower the angle or add a second camera for detail.
Corners and intersections are uncovered → Add corner cameras with overlapping views.
Backlight at gates/doors ruins the image → Change angle or add better lighting/shading.
Racks block key views → Add aisle-focused cameras instead of one wide camera.
Forklift traffic hides incidents → Add a wide context camera near traffic routes.
Lighting can make or break your CCTV footage. A good camera
with poor lighting still produces weak evidence.
Many sites install cameras and forget the recording plan. Then, when an incident happens, footage is missing or overwritten.
Blind spots don’t happen randomly. They usually come from the same layout mistakes.
Here are quick fixes that work.
Cameras are too high → Lower the angle or add a second camera for detail.
Corners and intersections are uncovered → Add corner cameras with overlapping views.
Backlight at gates/doors ruins the image → Change angle or add better lighting/shading.
Racks block key views → Add aisle-focused cameras instead of one wide camera.
Forklift traffic hides incidents → Add a wide context camera near traffic routes.
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