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Explosion-Proof IP Camera Frame Rate: 15fps vs 25fps vs 30fps for Industrial CCTV

Explosion-proof Ip Camera Frame Rate

Selecting the right explosion-proof IP camera frame rate โ€” 15fps, 25fps, or 30fps โ€” for industrial CCTV applications affects motion capture clarity, analytics accuracy, bandwidth consumption, and regulatory compliance for hazardous area surveillance systems.

Overview: Frame Rate in Industrial Explosion-Proof IP Camera Systems

Frame rate, expressed in frames per second (fps), determines how many individual still images the camera captures and streams per second. Higher frame rates produce smoother video with less motion blur and allow faster-moving subjects to be tracked more accurately, but consume proportionally more bandwidth and storage. In explosion-proof camera systems where network infrastructure and NVR storage are significant cost items, frame rate selection is a meaningful design decision.

Industrial CCTV standards define minimum frame rates for various application types. UK Home Office Scientific Development Branch (HOSDB) guidelines (widely adopted internationally) specify 6โ€“12 fps for general surveillance, 12โ€“25 fps for identification, and 25 fps for detecting fast events. IEC 62676 (video surveillance systems for use in security applications) defines image capture rates appropriate for different surveillance scenarios.

In explosion-proof camera specifications, frame rate must be considered in combination with resolution and codec. A 4MP explosion-proof camera recording at 25 fps with H.265 consumes approximately twice the bandwidth of the same camera at 12 fps โ€” an important consideration for systems with many cameras on constrained network infrastructure or using cellular wireless transmission.

Frame Rate Comparison for Industrial Explosion-Proof Cameras

Frame Rate Motion Clarity Bandwidth vs 25fps Storage vs 25fps Best Applications
6โ€“8 fps Significant motion blur ~25% of 25fps ~25โ€“30% of 25fps Low-activity areas, long-retention archive cameras
12โ€“15 fps Moderate โ€” walking persons trackable ~50% of 25fps ~50% of 25fps Process monitoring, general area surveillance
25 fps (PAL standard) Smooth โ€” standard broadcast quality Baseline Baseline Access control, identification, analytics, CCTV standard
30 fps (NTSC standard) Smooth โ€” marginal improvement over 25fps ~120% of 25fps ~120% of 25fps High-activity areas, fast-event capture, North American standard

Industrial Applications: Oil & Gas, Chemical Plants, Mining

In oil and gas facilities, the majority of explosion-proof camera installations use 25 fps as the standard frame rate. This aligns with international CCTV standards and provides sufficient motion capture for security and safety applications including personnel access monitoring, vehicle movement, and equipment observation. 25 fps is the appropriate specification for any explosion-proof camera that may be used for evidentiary recording โ€” footage that could be submitted to regulators, insurers, or legal proceedings requires a frame rate sufficient to clearly capture relevant events.

Process monitoring explosion-proof cameras โ€” cameras focused on fixed equipment like gauges, valves, and pressure vessels โ€” can often record at 12โ€“15 fps without compromising their monitoring function. The process values being monitored change slowly; the reduced frame rate has no meaningful impact on the camera’s ability to detect and document relevant changes. The bandwidth and storage savings from specifying 12 fps instead of 25 fps for a large number of process monitoring cameras can be substantial across a system of 50โ€“100 cameras.

In chemical plants, explosion-proof cameras at loading and unloading stations require 25 fps to capture vehicle and tanker movements accurately. Frame rates below 25 fps may cause motion blur on moving vehicles that prevents licence plate reading and reduces the utility of the footage for accident investigation. At loading stations where compliance with loading procedures must be documented, clear frame-by-frame footage at 25 fps provides the evidentiary standard required.

Mining operations in North America standardise on 30 fps for explosion-proof cameras, aligned with the NTSC video standard inherited from legacy analogue CCTV. For new IP camera installations, there is minimal practical difference between 25 and 30 fps for surveillance purposes. When specifying for export to North American markets or compatibility with legacy 30 fps recording infrastructure, 30 fps explosion-proof camera specification is appropriate.

Selection Guide

  • Security and access control, evidentiary recording: 25 fps minimum. Provides the motion capture quality required for identification and regulatory compliance.
  • Process equipment monitoring (gauges, valves, vessels): 12โ€“15 fps is adequate. Reduces bandwidth and storage requirements for large numbers of fixed-asset monitoring cameras.
  • Vehicle and heavy equipment monitoring: 25 fps minimum. Vehicle movement at typical speeds (5โ€“20 km/h in facility) requires 25 fps to maintain legible plate reading and clear motion capture.
  • Video analytics (line crossing, person detection): 25 fps provides optimal analytics performance. At lower frame rates, fast-moving subjects may miss detection frames. Specify 25 fps for all explosion-proof cameras with analytics-based alarm requirements.

Key Takeaways

  • 25 fps is the standard explosion-proof IP camera frame rate for security, access control, and evidentiary recording in international CCTV applications.
  • 12โ€“15 fps explosion-proof IP cameras are adequate for process equipment monitoring and can reduce bandwidth and storage requirements by 40โ€“50% compared to 25 fps.
  • 30 fps explosion-proof IP camera specification is appropriate for North American installations aligned with the NTSC video heritage standard.
  • Video analytics accuracy โ€” particularly AI-based person and vehicle detection โ€” is significantly better at 25 fps than at 12 fps.
  • Frame rate multiplied by resolution and codec efficiency determines the actual bitrate; use H.265 to maximise the efficiency of any selected frame rate.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is there a meaningful visual difference between 25fps and 30fps for explosion-proof camera footage?

In standard surveillance review, the difference between 25 fps and 30 fps is imperceptible to most observers. Both provide smooth motion without significant blur for subjects moving at typical facility speeds. The 30 fps standard originates from NTSC electrical frequency (60 Hz, giving 30 full frames per second) while 25 fps originates from PAL (50 Hz, giving 25 frames per second). For new digital IP camera systems, either standard is acceptable and the choice should be driven by system infrastructure compatibility rather than performance.

Can I mix 15fps and 25fps explosion-proof cameras in the same NVR system?

Yes. Modern NVR systems and VMS platforms handle cameras with different frame rates simultaneously without issues. Each camera is recorded at its configured frame rate. The NVR allocates storage based on each camera’s actual bitrate. This allows a practical hybrid approach: 25 fps for security-critical cameras, 15 fps for process monitoring cameras, reducing overall storage requirements while maintaining full performance where needed.

What is the minimum frame rate acceptable for explosion-proof cameras used for facial identification?

For reliable facial identification in post-incident review, 12 fps is the absolute minimum with good lighting and a relatively stationary subject. For moving subjects in a walkway or access control scenario, 25 fps is strongly recommended. Below 12 fps, a walking person may traverse several body-widths between frames, making reliable identification from a continuous walk-through much more difficult.

Do higher frame rates require more powerful explosion-proof camera processors?

Yes, but modern explosion-proof IP camera processors easily handle 25โ€“30 fps at 2MP and 4MP resolutions. 8MP (4K) at 30 fps is more demanding and requires a capable onboard processor โ€” verify the camera’s specification confirms 4K at 30 fps, as some models reduce frame rate at 4K. Analytics simultaneously with high-resolution, high-frame-rate recording adds further processor demand; verify the camera’s maximum supported analytics configuration at your target resolution and frame rate.

Does recording at 25fps use exactly twice as much storage as 15fps?

Not exactly. The relationship is linear in terms of frames: 25 fps generates 25/15 = 1.67ร— more frames than 15 fps. However, temporal compression in H.264 and H.265 means that additional frames between keyframes are highly compressed relative to the keyframes themselves. The actual storage increase from 15 to 25 fps is typically 1.5โ€“1.8ร— rather than exactly 1.67ร—, and varies with scene motion activity. In static industrial scenes, the additional frames contain very little new information and are compressed very efficiently.

Ready to specify explosion-proof cameras for your facility? Request a quote from Veilux โ€” our engineers will recommend the right Class I Div 1 or ATEX-certified camera for your hazardous area.

Related Resources

Standards References: IECEx International Certification Scheme · OSHA Hazardous Work Environments

Explore Veilux’s full range of explosion-proof cameras and request a quote for your hazardous-area project.

Daniel Fernandez

About the Author

Daniel Fernandez

Daniel Fernandez is a hazardous area security systems specialist with over a decade of experience specifying ATEX, IECEx, UL Class I Division 1, and cUL certified surveillance equipment for oil and gas, chemical, mining, pharmaceutical, and offshore environments. He holds expertise in NEC and IEC area classification standards and has consulted on explosion-proof camera system designs across North America, Europe, and the Middle East.

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