Larman17, my suggestion to you is to unplug all three cams. Set one addressable cam power supply to the desired house
code / unit code (B1). Remove all cams from Vanguard and restart the application. Plug camera 1 in to an outlet near
your PC where you know you'll have excellent signal strength. Activate that cam using Vanguard and review the image
from cam number 1. If it looks good, unplug cam #1 and it's power supply. Set cam 2's addr power supply to the same
HC/UC used for testing cam #1. Plug cam 2 in and view the image on Vanguard. If it looks good, repeat the same for cam3.
Now, with only one camera plugged in at a time, move it farther away from the PC and vr36a. Go back and check the
image. Repeat for cams 2 and 3 making sure to have only one cam plugged in a any one time. If you're getting good
video signals at the desired distance (make sure you're aligning the antenna paddles with that of the vr36a), you know
the cameras are good and the vr36a is as well. Now, take cam 2, change his HC/UC to the next number (B2), and move
it into it's final position. Go back to the PC and add that camera (B2) into Vanguard and hit it !. Check the image for
cam 2. You may have to click cam2, then cam1, then cam2 again to make certain both addressable power supplies
learn their respective place on the powerline. If you're able to switch back-n-forth between cam1 and cam2 and the
images are good, set cam3's addr power supply to B3, move him into final position, plug him in. Go back and add him
to Vanguard. Click cam1, check image. Click cam2, check image. Click cam3 check image. If you are NOT able to get
clear video while the three cams are plugged in, it is entirely possible that the X10 signals meant to turn on one camera
and turn off the others, are not making across the powerline reliably to each camera; hence leaving two or more
powered up simultaneously. And, of course, the vr36a cannot discriminate between two or more video signals coming in.
Only one camera can be powered up at any time. This leads to another point: The vr36a and the 3 cams all must be
set to the same frequency which is accomplished by the slide switch labeled A,B,C,D. This is not on the power supply
but the units themselves. The camera's freqency setting switch, is located beneath a little black rubber cap meant to
weatherproof and keep from accidental changes. I believe most X10 video devices come set to frequency A.
Boy, I've gone through the same pain you are feeling now. Heck, just the other day, I plugged in a new color cam and
forgot to set the frequency and got those blurry, raspy video images. It was then I remembered to set the freq.
I've gotta stop being to wordy. Sorry folks.
mike