This mount lets you install a Ubiquiti UniFi G5/G6 turret camera at the top of a wall with a small standoff (~20 cm) from the wall. It includes two TPU plugs (printed separately) that seal the screw holes. I used 1/4" screws with wall anchors and printed the main body in PETG for outdoor durability.
Has some internal draining holes, just in case any water makes it to the inside
Brief printing & assembly notes
Materials
- Mount body: PETG (for weather resistance).
- Plugs: TPU ~95A (printed separately). The plug give a small tolerance for press-fit, but you can use sealant.
Hardware & mounting
- Use the screws supplied with the camera to attach the camera mounting ring (easier and safer to bolt the ring to the camera on the ground, then lift the camera into the mount rather than doing that work on a ladder).
- 3 wall anchors/plugs and screws (¼") recommended for outdoor use.
Supports & print behavior
- The face that mates to the wall requires supports — the part will not print reliably without them (large floating surface).
- The plug holes include a small supports at the bottom; remove that block before installing.
- If your slicer prompts you to scale the supports (ask whether the model units are inches or meters), Orca does, choose “No” so supports aren’t blown up in size.
- Painted the support surface so the supports wouldn’t be generated elsewhere.
Sealing & waterproofing
- For the TPU plugs, silicone caulk can improve the long-term seal if desired.
Ethernet / cable routing
- Thread the Ethernet cable through the top hole before seating the camera; add the RJ45 connector after the cable is through the hole. There’s enough room inside for the camera’s built-in gland.
Print hints
- Wall thickness I used: 5 perimeters
- Bottom: 6 layers
- Top: 4 layers.
- Adjust these if you have different strength/aesthetic needs.
Quick assembly checklist
- Print mount (PETG) and TPU plugs separately.
- Remove the bottom support from the plug holes.
- Mount camera mounting ring
- Feed Ethernet cable through the top hole and pull enough cable to crimp the connector after routing.
- Attach mount to wall with anchors and screws.
- Press TPU plugs into holes (add a small bead of silicone if you want extra sealing)
- Mount camera to the mounting ring.
Yes i know, but they didn't had black cameras at that time
Tags
The author marked this model as their own original creation.