Do you support multi-site rollouts anchored in South San Francisco?+
Yes. Many of our South San Francisco-based clients scale IP Camera Installation to additional sites across California and nationally. A single PM standardizes drawings, materials, testing thresholds, and closeout format across every location, so IT sees identical documentation whether the site is in South San Francisco or Chicago.
How long does a typical IP Camera Installation project take in South San Francisco?+
Timelines depend on drop count, pathway complexity, and after-hours restrictions. A small South San Francisco tenant improvement of 20–40 drops usually completes in 2–5 working days. Larger San Mateo County projects with backbone fiber, MDF/IDF buildouts, and multiple floors typically run 2–6 weeks. We publish a per-phase schedule with the quote so your GC and IT team can coordinate cutover.
What documentation do we get at the end of a South San Francisco IP Camera Installation install?+
Every South San Francisco project closes with Fluke DSX (or OTDR for fiber) certification reports for every port, a TIA-606-B labeled patch schedule, redlined as-built drawings, rack elevations, warranty registration, and a MAC-ready cabling database. Your IT team can pick it up cold on day one.
Can you handle after-hours IP Camera Installation in South San Francisco to avoid business disruption?+
Absolutely. Night, weekend, and phased cutover windows are standard on South San Francisco tenant improvements, hospital environments, retail cores, and 24-hour operations across San Mateo County. We run swing shifts, dark-window pulls, and cutovers scheduled around production without inflating the price.
How many cameras can one PoE switch support?+
Depends on switch PoE budget. A 24-port switch with 370W budget supports 24 standard cameras (15W each) or roughly 12 PoE+ cameras (30W each). We size the switch to the camera power draw plus 20% headroom, not to port count alone.
Do IP cameras work with our existing network?+
Yes, but we usually recommend a dedicated VLAN for cameras — keeps traffic off the corporate LAN and simplifies bandwidth planning. High-bitrate 4K cameras and analytics traffic can otherwise saturate a shared workgroup switch.
Do prevailing wage laws apply to cabling projects in South San Francisco?+
Yes, prevailing wage laws often apply to certain low-voltage cabling projects in South San Francisco, particularly those funded by public entities, within public buildings, or for significant commercial developments that may have public funding components. As a licensed C-10 contractor, Access Cabling is experienced in adhering to prevailing wage requirements as mandated by the State of California and local agreements, ensuring compliance on applicable projects.