An open or short in the cable is the most common cause. Breaks in the center conductors are caused by
excessive pulling or bending, shorts are usually caused by improper connector installation.
Solution: Disconnect the cable at both ends and check with a meter.
1) From center pin to outer connector should read open. If it reads shorted, reinstall the connector. If it
still reads shorted, read cable directly. If this fails and cable still reads shorted, replace cable.
2) Short one end (pin to outer), meter from other end, it should read shorted. If it reads open, check the
cable directly. If the cable reads open, replace the cable.
Power supply loss is also a common cause of picture failure, especially if its a low voltage camera. Check power supply fuses and system mains supply.
Problem: Monitor has “ghosts”
When a video signal is not properly terminated it reflects back on itself, resulting in secondary images
called “ghosts.” Unless you pass the signal onto another video product, the signal needs to be terminated.
Solution: Make sure “Hi-Z/75 ohm” switch is in “75ohm” position unless looping video signal on to
another device.
Problem: Picture tears horizontally or snowy bars roll
The system is suffering from a ground loop(s). A ground loop is caused when camera and monitor are
powered from sources using different grounds with different ground potentials. If a path for current flow
(other than the coax) exists, ground loops are possible. A difference of a few millivolts can cause a
ground loop. Ground loops are not predictable and may appear or disappear after the system is installed.
Solution: Install a ground loop corrector or power all cameras from the same source as the monitor.
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