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Security system upgrades and modernisation in Auckland

Legacy system replacements, CCTV modernisation, alarm upgrades, access control migration, and cloud security retrofits. Comsys Security upgrades outdated systems across Auckland without unnecessary disruption to your operations.

Security system upgrade and modernisation

When to upgrade and what to upgrade first

Security systems age in ways that are easy to underestimate. A DVR-based analog CCTV system that was state-of-the-art in 2012 is now producing footage that identifies nobody and recording on a hard drive that’s been running continuously for over a decade. An alarm panel with expired firmware support can’t receive the security patches that close known vulnerabilities. An access control system that doesn’t support mobile credentials is forcing you to issue physical cards to a contractor workforce that rotates every month.

Comsys assesses existing systems honestly. We don’t recommend replacement when a targeted upgrade will serve you better. And we don’t recommend partial upgrades that create incompatible islands of old and new technology that won’t integrate properly. The starting point is always a documented assessment of what you have, what’s working, and what it would realistically cost to extend its life versus replace it properly.

  • Legacy CCTV modernisation — replace analog DVR systems with modern IP NVR and HD cameras
  • Alarm system upgrades — panel replacements, new sensors, cellular backup, and app integration
  • Access control migration — migrate from obsolete card technology to modern encrypted credentials
  • Smart security retrofits — add remote access, smartphone alerts, and AI analytics to existing cameras
  • Cloud migration for security systems — shift management to cloud-hosted platforms for multi-site businesses
  • Cabling audit and reuse — reuse existing cable runs where possible to reduce upgrade cost
Request an upgrade assessment
CCTV upgrade from analog to IP NVR system

CCTV modernisation: from analog DVR to IP NVR

The single most common upgrade Comsys carries out in Auckland is replacing an analog DVR-based CCTV system with a modern IP NVR system. The practical improvements are significant: resolution jumps from 700-line analog (essentially 0.4MP) to 4MP or 4K, night-time footage goes from infrared-washed monochrome to usable colour with Hikvision ColorVu or Dahua Full-Color, and remote viewing via a stable app replaces the unreliable DDNS and port-forwarding arrangements that most old DVR systems rely on.

The cabling question is the critical one. Existing coaxial cable runs (the RG59 or RG6 runs from a DVR install) can often be reused with an active video balun at each camera end. This means the labour cost of cabling — which is typically the largest single cost in a CCTV install — can sometimes be substantially reduced. Comsys assesses existing cable runs during the site visit and confirms which can be reused before quoting. We don’t assume cable reuse without testing, and we don’t recommend reusing cable that’s borderline.

  • 4MP to 4K resolution upgrade — footage you can actually identify people from
  • ColorVu / Full-Color night vision — usable colour in low-light conditions
  • Stable remote access app — Hik-Connect or DMSS replacing old DDNS arrangements
  • Existing coax cable assessment — reuse confirmed by testing, not assumed
  • AI analytics upgrade — person and vehicle detection on new cameras replacing generic motion alerts
Book a CCTV upgrade assessment
Access control upgrade and alarm modernisation

Access control migration and alarm modernisation

Access control upgrade projects are driven by two common triggers: the existing system no longer supports the required number of users or credentials, or the credential technology is insecure. Older 125 kHz proximity cards (HID Prox, EM4100) can be cloned in seconds with freely available hardware. If your site is still running on these cards, any card-holder can hand their credential to someone else — or have it cloned without knowing — and that person has physical access to your building. Migrating to 13.56 MHz DESFire or HID iCLASS Seos credentials closes this vulnerability.

Alarm modernisation is often triggered by a panel that’s failed or is approaching end of manufacturer support, by a move to a monitoring station that requires a specific comms path, or by a desire to integrate the alarm with CCTV and access control on a single platform. Comsys replaces alarm panels while retaining existing sensor wiring wherever the cable run is serviceable, reducing the labour cost of a panel upgrade significantly compared to a full system replacement.

  • Insecure credential migration — replace 125 kHz cards with encrypted DESFire or Seos credentials
  • Access platform migration — move from end-of-life systems to current Paxton Net2 or Inner Range
  • Alarm panel replacement — new panel, existing sensor wiring retained where serviceable
  • 4G cellular comms upgrade — replace PSTN or unreliable IP comms with reliable 4G backup
  • Integration upgrade — connect alarm, CCTV, and access on a unified management platform
Get an upgrade quote

Security system upgrades — common questions

When should I upgrade my security system?

The main triggers for a security system upgrade are: the system is producing footage or alerts that no longer serve their intended purpose (unidentifiable CCTV images, excessive false alarms, inaccessible remote access); the hardware or software is approaching or past end of manufacturer support; your insurer or lease is requiring updated equipment; or you’ve experienced an incident that revealed a coverage or capability gap. Comsys also recommends a review every five to seven years as a preventive measure, since most security hardware has a realistic useful life in that range before performance or reliability becomes a problem.

Can you upgrade my existing CCTV without replacing everything?

Often yes. The most common partial upgrade is replacing cameras and the NVR while retaining existing cable runs. For analog DVR systems where the coaxial cabling is in good condition, we use active video baluns to allow IP cameras to run over the existing coax, which can significantly reduce the cabling labour cost. We confirm which cable runs are suitable for reuse during the site visit rather than making assumptions that result in surprises during installation.

What are the signs my security system needs replacing?

Footage that doesn’t clearly show faces or number plates; a recording system that can’t be accessed remotely or requires a technical workaround to do so; an alarm panel that generates frequent false alarms or won’t communicate reliably with a monitoring station; access control credentials that are the older 125 kHz type; hard drives that have been running continuously for five or more years without replacement; and cameras that are producing black-and-white only night footage when colour alternatives are now standard and comparable in cost.

How much does a security system upgrade cost in Auckland?

Upgrade cost depends heavily on what can be retained from the existing install. A CCTV upgrade that retains serviceable cable runs costs substantially less than a full new install. As a guide: replacing a 4–6 camera analog DVR system with IP cameras and a new NVR, retaining existing cable, ranges from $2,500 to $4,500. A full replacement including new cabling on the same camera count ranges from $3,800 to $6,000 depending on cabling complexity. Alarm panel replacements retaining existing sensors range from $1,200 to $3,500. Comsys quotes in writing after a site assessment with costs itemised clearly.

Can old analog cameras be upgraded to IP?

Analog cameras cannot be upgraded to IP — they are fundamentally different technologies. However, the coaxial cable used for analog cameras can often be reused for IP cameras with active video baluns, which convert the signal. The cameras themselves need to be replaced. On a system where the cabling is in good condition, this means the main cost is the new IP cameras and NVR rather than full re-cabling, making the upgrade substantially more cost-effective than a complete system replacement.

Free security upgrade assessment

We assess what you have, confirm what can be retained, and quote the upgrade in writing. Auckland-wide.

Related services

Related security services: CCTV Surveillance · Managed Security Services · Security Risk Consultation