How Many Surveillance Trailers Do You Need? Coverage Math for Jobsites, Yards, and Lots

By Hawk Surveillance Operations Team. California construction site security. Last updated: [05/04/2026]

Editorial note: Camera ranges, mast height effects, and per-acre coverage estimates in this guide are typical industry bands and Hawk operational rules of thumb based on common trailer configurations. Actual coverage on your site depends on the specific trailer model, camera package, lighting conditions, weather, and obstructions. Treat the numbers below as planning guidelines rather than guaranteed performance specifications. For a site-specific coverage map, send Hawk your site plan or aerial.

How Many Surveillance Trailers Do You Need? Coverage Math for Jobsites, Yards, and Lots

TLDR: The 1-Trailer-Per-5-Acre Rule (and Why It’s Only a Starting Point)

Start with a simple rule: one mobile surveillance trailer per 5 acres of relatively open ground with clear line of sight. That gets you close enough to budget and compare vendors.

It is only a starting point. Obstructions, high-value zones, and after-dark performance will push the number up. Open sites with clean sight lines can push it down, though placement always matters more than raw count.

This guide gives you a practical way to size your deployment. You will see how camera ranges really work, how mast height changes coverage, and how to apply a five-step method on your own site plan. We also walk through sample layouts at 1, 5, and 25 acres, plus a retail parking lot.

Use the math below to size your deployment. Or send your site map to Hawk and we will return a coverage map at no cost. See our mobile surveillance trailer rental overview for deployment options.

What a Single Surveillance Trailer Actually Covers

The Camera Range Question: Detection vs Recognition vs Identification

When someone says a camera “sees 1,500 ft,” they are usually talking about detection, not identification. The industry standard that defines the four levels of camera observation is IEC EN 62676-4, commonly called DORI (Detection, Observation, Recognition, Identification):

  • Detection: something is present. Typical PTZ: ~600 to 1,500+ ft (~183 to 457+ m) depending on zoom, sensor, and light

  • Observation / Recognition: you can tell it is a person, not an animal. Typical PTZ: ~300 to 600 ft (~91 to 183 m)

  • Identification: you can identify a specific person. Typical PTZ: ~100 to 300 ft (~30 to 91 m). Fixed cameras: ~30 to 50 ft (~9 to 15 m)

Range generally depends on focal length, sensor size, compression, lighting, and weather. Treat ranges as bands, not single numbers. Hawk’s actual specifications depend on the trailer model and camera package selected.

💬 Hawk Insight: Most losses happen at night and at the edges of your site. If your P1 zones need identification, plan your trailer spacing so your PTZ can hit 100 to 300 ft identification on those zones, not just detect movement at long range.

PTZ vs Fixed Cameras: What Each Sees

Camera Type

Strength

Limitation

Best Use

PTZ (pan-tilt-zoom)

Long reach, flexible zoom

Sees one direction at a time

Active sweeps, zoom to incidents

Fixed

Continuous coverage, no blind moments

Shorter effective range

Perimeter, gates, storage zones

Best practice is generally one PTZ for active sweep plus 2 to 4 fixed cameras for continuous coverage. The PTZ delivers reach and zoom flexibility, while the fixed cameras maintain continuous coverage on the zones the PTZ isn’t currently watching.

Mast Height: Why 22 ft Beats 18 ft (and 25 ft Sometimes Beats 22 ft) Height generally increases coverage because it improves line of sight and the viewing angle over obstacles.

Mast Height

Practical Impact

18 ft

Works on open lots, limited clearance over stacked materials

22 ft

Typically clears 8 ft stacks at moderate distance, better angles into yards

25 ft

Best for complex sites, diminishing returns beyond this

A 22 ft mast often clears common obstructions like pallets, equipment, and temporary fencing, depending on stack distance and camera tilt. A 25 ft mast helps on multi-phase builds or yards with tall stacks. Above 25 ft, wind load, transport, and deployment complexity generally increase.

Thermal, IR, and Low-Light: Coverage After Dark

After dark, your effective range typically drops unless you plan for it.

  • IR (infrared) illumination: extends usable night coverage roughly 100 to 300 ft depending on lens and IR power

  • Low-light sensors: improve color images at dusk and under site lighting

  • Thermal cameras: detect heat, not light. Useful in fog, smoke, and total darkness. Range varies widely by sensor and lens

Thermal upgrades add cost, but they solve specific problems. Fog-prone corridors and high-value yards generally benefit the most. See options under accessories and upgrades.

💬 Hawk Insight: If your loss risk is highest between 10 pm and 4 am, design for night first. Daytime conditions are easier to plan for and easier to verify.

The Five-Step Method to Size Your Deployment

Step 1: Map Your Site and Identify Priority Zones

Start with a site plan or an aerial. A quick pass in Google Earth works.

Mark:

  • Entry and exit points

  • Equipment yard and contractor parking

  • Lay-down areas

  • Fuel and generator storage

  • Finished materials

  • Perimeter weak points and access roads

Then rank the zones:

  • P1: needs identification-grade coverage

  • P2: recognition is sufficient

  • P3: detection is enough

If a contractor is sizing a 12-acre warehouse build, the P1 zones are typically the tool crib, copper storage, and the main gate.

Step 2: Measure the Longest Required Line of Sight

From each likely trailer position, measure the distance to the farthest point in its assigned zone.

If your farthest P1 point is 260 ft away, you are within typical PTZ identification range. If it is 400 ft, you either move the trailer closer, add another trailer, or add fixed cameras closer to that zone.

Use rough measurements. You are not drafting a survey. You are checking if your distances fit within 100 to 300 ft identification for P1 zones.

Step 3: Match Camera Type to Detection Requirement

Map your zones to camera behavior:

  • P1: PTZ must reach identification at the measured distance. Add fixed cameras for continuous coverage on the same zone

  • P2: PTZ sweep is fine. Recognition at ~300 to 600 ft is generally acceptable

  • P3: fixed wide-angle cameras can cover these at distance for detection

This is where the PTZ plus fixed mix earns its keep. One device cannot do everything well at once.

Step 4: Apply the Per-Acre Sizing Rule and Adjust for Obstructions

Start with 1 trailer per 5 acres of clear ground.

Then add trailers for:

  • Major line-of-sight breaks such as buildings under construction, stacks above 8 ft, or retained earth

  • Clusters of P1 zones that sit beyond a single trailer’s identification range

  • Isolated gates or access roads that a perimeter trailer cannot cover

Site Condition

Adjustment

Open 5 acres, clear sight lines

1 trailer

5 acres with heavy equipment yard

2 trailers

10 to 12 acres, mixed phases

2 to 3 trailers

25 acres, multiple zones

4 to 5 trailers

Step 5: Plan Placement and Verify with a Test Deployment

Place trailers where priority zones and weak perimeter points intersect. Favor high points to maximize line of sight.

After install, verify at night:

  • Walk each P1 zone

  • Confirm you can identify a person at the expected distance

  • Adjust PTZ presets and fixed camera angles

Hawk’s teams handle this as part of deployment and project services and follow a repeatable method documented in our deployment process.

💬 Hawk Insight: The first night walk-through finds issues you will not see on a daytime plan. Fix them early.

Send us your site plan or an aerial. Hawk will return a recommended trailer count, placement, and camera configuration within two business days.

Sample Layouts: 1-Acre, 5-Acre, 25-Acre, and Parking Lot

The following are illustrative layouts based on typical site conditions. Actual placement and trailer count for your project depend on site-specific obstructions, P1 zone locations, and operational needs.

1-Acre Construction Lot (Single Trailer)

Site: Dense infill build in a tight urban area like San Francisco or Oakland, tight boundaries, one gate

  • Trailer: Compact Urban Surveillance Trailer is typically the best fit for tight infill sites; Heavy-Duty Industrial Surveillance Trailer is an alternative when the project also needs sustained power and rougher conditions

  • Placement: Back corner, angled across the lot

  • Coverage: PTZ sweeps the perimeter. Fixed cameras lock on the gate and material storage

  • Rationale: Under 5 acres with short distances. One trailer can typically deliver identification across most P1 zones

5-Acre Logistics Yard (Two Trailers)

25-Acre Industrial Site (Four Trailers)

  • Site: Large industrial project or solar farm, common in the Central Valley near Sacramento

  • Trailers: Four Flagship Solar Surveillance Trailers

  • Placement: Perimeter cardinal points, covering quadrants

  • Coverage: Each trailer owns a quadrant. PTZ sweeps overlap toward the center

  • Rationale: The 1-per-5-acre rule applies. Solar avoids generator logistics on large footprints

Retail Parking Lot (Compact Urban Trailer)

  • Site: ~3-acre retail parking lot with vehicle theft risk, common in suburban Bay Area markets like San Jose or Concord

  • Trailer: Compact Urban Surveillance Trailer

  • Placement: Back corner with long sight lines across rows

  • Coverage: PTZ covers central lanes for identification. Fixed cameras cover entry and exit for plate capture

  • Rationale: Open layout with minimal occlusion. One well-placed trailer can typically cover P1 zones

Hawk returns a recommended trailer count, placement, and camera configuration within two business days at no cost.

When You Need More Trailers Than the Rule Suggests

Heavy Obstructions and Line-of-Sight Breaks

Stacks above 8 ft, large vehicles, scaffolding, and partial structures block sight lines. Each major break can justify another trailer or a relocation.

High-Value Zones That Need Identification-Grade Coverage

Copper spools, tool cribs, fuel tanks, and generator banks generally need identification. That compresses your effective distance to 100 to 300 ft and can increase trailer count.

Multi-Phase Sites Where the Layout Changes

As steel goes up, sight lines change. Repositioning every 4 to 8 weeks is typical. Some phases need extra trailers to avoid gaps.

After-Dark and Bad-Weather Coverage Requirements

Night and fog reduce range. If risk is overnight, tighten spacing or add thermal. Solar power options are detailed on the Flagship Solar Surveillance Trailer page.

When You Need Fewer Trailers Than the Rule Suggests

  • Open sites with clear edge-to-edge sight lines

  • Risk concentrated in one area that a single trailer can cover

  • Existing fixed cameras on buildings covering part of the footprint

  • Secondary layers like guarded entry or physical barriers

Right-sizing means you do not pay for coverage you cannot use.

Placement Mistakes That Waste Coverage

  • Too low: placing in a dip or behind equipment kills line of sight

  • Too close to the fence: PTZ range is wasted beyond the perimeter

  • Facing the sun: glare reduces usable hours in the afternoon

  • Ignoring wind: high winds can force mast retraction

  • Static PTZ patterns: predictable sweeps are easy to game

  • No night verification: lighting conditions change your effective range

Coverage and Active Response: Why Cameras Alone Are Not Enough

Cameras handle detection, but people handle response. Without active monitoring, you’ll have a record of every incident but you won’t have stopped any of them.

With 24/7 remote monitoring, voice-down and live operators can interrupt activity in real time. Coverage math sets the floor for what’s possible on your site, while active response is what determines whether incidents get interrupted in real time.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many surveillance trailers do I need for my site?

One mobile surveillance trailer typically covers up to 5 acres of open ground with clear sight lines. A 10 to 12-acre mixed site typically needs 2 to 3 trailers. Add trailers for obstructions, priority zones beyond 300 ft, or broken sight lines. If P1 zones sit beyond a single trailer’s identification range, reposition or add a second trailer to maintain coverage.

PTZ cameras can typically detect at roughly 600 to 1,500+ ft, recognize at 300 to 600 ft, and identify at 100 to 300 ft depending on lens, sensor, and light. Fixed cameras typically identify at 30 to 50 ft. Night, fog, and glare reduce these ranges.

One trailer commonly covers up to 5 acres of open ground, but coverage depends on line of sight and required detail. If you need identification at 200 to 300 ft across key zones, you may need tighter spacing or additional trailers even on smaller sites.

There is no fixed camera-per-acre number. A typical trailer uses one PTZ plus 2 to 4 fixed cameras. Coverage is generally driven by distances and obstructions, not acreage alone. Focus on meeting identification range in P1 zones.

PTZ cameras provide long-range, flexible views but only look one direction at a time. Fixed cameras provide continuous coverage with shorter range. Combining one PTZ with several fixed cameras typically balances reach and constant visibility.

Masts are commonly 18 to 25 ft. A 22 ft mast often clears 8 ft obstructions at moderate distance, improving line of sight and reducing blind spots. Taller masts increase coverage but add wind load and deployment considerations.

Thermal is not required for every site, but it generally helps in total darkness, fog, and smoke. It improves detection where visible light is limited. Sites with high overnight risk or poor lighting benefit most from thermal upgrades.

Place trailers where priority zones and weak perimeter points intersect, preferably on higher ground. Keep key P1 zones within 100 to 300 ft for identification and verify coverage at night after installation.

Yes for small, open sites under about 5 acres with clear sight lines. Larger or obstructed sites typically need multiple trailers to maintain identification coverage and avoid blind spots.

Send a site plan, aerial, or address and acreage to Hawk. You will receive a coverage map with recommended trailer count, placement, and camera configuration, typically within two business days at no cost.

Key Takeaways

  • Start with 1 trailer per 5 acres, then adjust based on site conditions

  • Design for DORI ranges, not marketing range claims

  • Use PTZ plus fixed cameras for reach and continuous coverage

  • 22 ft masts often outperform 18 ft in real sites

  • Apply the five-step method on your specific plan

  • Add trailers for obstructions and P1 zones

  • Reduce trailer count on open, simple footprints

  • Placement beats quantity

  • Pair coverage with monitoring to stop incidents in progress

Get a Free Coverage Map for Your Site

Send a site plan, aerial, or just an address and acreage. Hawk returns a written coverage map at no cost, with no obligation.

This guide reflects Hawk Surveillance Systems’ operational experience deploying mobile surveillance trailers across California construction, industrial, and logistics sites. Hawk follows the operational safety practices documented in our QHSE framework, and our deployment specialists conduct site-specific coverage planning before any installation.

This guide is educational and intended to help site owners and project managers think through surveillance deployment planning. Camera ranges, mast height effects, and per-acre estimates are typical bands and may vary based on equipment configuration, site conditions, weather, and lighting. Always verify specific coverage requirements with a qualified security provider before relying on any planning guidance in this article.

About the Author

The Hawk Surveillance Operations Team designs, deploys, and manages mobile surveillance trailers across Northern California, including San Francisco, Sacramento, San Jose, Oakland, Fresno, Stockton, Concord, and Hayward. The team operates the Flagship Solar, Compact Urban, and Heavy-Duty Industrial trailer lines, and follows the operational safety standards documented in Hawk’s QHSE framework.

To request a site-specific coverage plan or speak with a deployment specialist

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