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markb

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  1. Strange to find one's own post on a topic when re-researching almost five years later. We've been using XProtect to record key frames (is that 5 fps?) until motion is detected, then increase to 15 fps. Both are from the cameras' main stream. But we need to expand past the 8-camera free license, so looking at other options again. Synology's Surveillance Station allows recording the substream until motion is detected, then switching to the main stream. Reviewing Hikvision's NVR v4.x manual, I can't find any documentation about switching the stream on the fly. So either you have perfect motion detection (ha!) and only record on motion, or you have big hard drives and record 24x7.
  2. Thanks for the reply. After some other problems (especially high CPU usage), I've decided to go with another NVR software (XProtect). So far I haven't seen the dual stream recording there either. What I'd really like is continuous substream recording then main stream on motion (with a few seconds of buffer). Save disk space but still have a basic index/confirmation 24x7.
  3. I'm setting up iVMS-4200 v2.5.1.7 software on Windows. In the User's Guide, the description of Storage Schedule Advanced Settings says, "Note: For specific type of devices, you can select Dual-Stream for recording both main stream and sub-stream of the camera. In this mode, you can switch the stream type during remote playback." However my DS-2CD2332-I camera with the latest 5.3.0 firmware only shows the options as Main Stream and Sub-Stream. The camera does offer two streams, I assume simultaneously. Seems like it would be up to the recorder to record both streams, but that's not an option.
  4. markb

    Two Mitar cameras and sample images

    Well as you can see in the photos, the FOV on the 1/4" camera is noticeably wider than on the 1/3" camera. They were mounted on the same mount for these tests. Both supposedly have 3.6mm lenses. If I'm remembering correctly from my photo hobby days, the normal lens for a 35mm camera is 50mm. But a 50mm lens on a 6x7cm camera is a wide angle. If CCD size works the same way, the 3.6mm should give me a wider field of view with the larger "film" size. Since it doesn't, either the specs are wrong or something else is involved. (I can see the "3.6" on the smaller camera's lens, but the lens on the larger camera is unmarked, so maybe it's really longer.) Mark
  5. markb

    Two Mitar cameras and sample images

    Rory, Thanks for your comments. If resolution is the pixel size (512x492), yes that's the same. I thought that 520 vs. 420 TVL meant higher resolution. And shouldn't the larger CCD also give a better image? No doubt. If you or anyone has a better recommendation in the $40 - $90 range, I'd be glad to hear it. I'm still in my 30-day return policy on the 810Bs. Finally read up on what an I/R cut filter is, and I think I see what you mean. But the lack of an I/R filter just means poor color, right? I can live with a washed-out image, but I want it to be as sharp as possible, day or night. Thanks for those instructions. There's a sticker so they'll know if they have been opened. If I decide to keep the cams, I'll probably try focusing them. Good thought. I checked the specs for this Intel PC430 webcam. It says that the "Image Sensor" is "Progressive scan CCD, 640 x 480." But then it says that the "Resolutions (native)" are "40 x 480, 320 x 240, 160 x 120." So maybe the 640x480 is interlaced. Thanks again for the time you take to help out us newbies! Mark
  6. markb

    Two Mitar cameras and sample images

    Here is a daylight shot from Camera #2, Mitar MT-306: Same basic scene from Camera #3, Mitar MT-810B: Now back to Camera #2, Mitar MT-306, with digital zoom: And Camera #3, Mitar MT-810B, with digital zoom: These still look fuzzy and washed out to me compared to Rory's jeep picture posted a few days ago, also from a "budget color camera." Maybe my USB converter is the weak link here? Does anyone have a USB converter that they recommend? Thanks, Mark
  7. markb

    Two Mitar cameras and sample images

    These samples were captured from live (not recorded) feed the DVR's video out port using AmCap and my old USB webcam converter. IR Image from Camera #2, Mitar MT-306: IR Image from Camera #3, Mitar MT-810B: Is it just me, or does the "better" MT-810B cam look fuzzier? The holder for the towel bar has a crack in it--visible in the first pic but not the second. Does the MT-810B need focusing? The instructions say not to open the camera. Mark
  8. Hi, Thought I'd start a new thread to share some sample images from two Mitar cameras. Continuing the numbering from the previous thread, Camera #2 is a Mitar MT-306, OEM'd as GS-306. Camera #3 is a newer Mitar MT-810B (according to the box--hard to find online), OEM'd as GS-306B. The main difference is in sensor size and lines of resolution. Here are the specs: ------------------------------------ Camera #2 - Mitar MT-306 ------------------------------------ Day & Night Outdoor CCD Camera (Waterproof) • Built-in infrared LED, may work under zero degree of illumination environment • The infrared project distance is between 12~18 meters (40 ~ 60 ft) • Using waterproof metal crust (IP67 standard) • Automatic backlight compensatory function • Automatic tracking white balance Model Name GS306 Pick-Up Device 1/4" Sony CCD Number of Pixels 512(H) x 492(V) System of Signal NTSC/PAL Horizontal Resolution 420TV Lines Minimum Illumination 0 Lux Lens CS Mount, 3.6mm (90°) Backlight Compensation On/Off Electronic Shutter 1/50(1/60)~1/100,000sec White Balance Auto S/N Ratio >48db Gamma Correction >0.45 Operation Temperature -20°C~50°C (-4°F ~ 122°F) Sync System Internal Video Output ≤1.2Vp-p/75Ω Power Source Supply DC12V, ≥750mA Weight Approx. 2 lb Dimension 102x58 mm (4x2.3 in) Send private message ------------------------------------ Camera #3 - Mitar MT-810B ------------------------------------ Day & Night Outdoor CCD Camera (Waterproof) • High Resolution Color IR LED • Built-in infrared LED, may work under zero degree of illumination environment • The infrared project distance is between 25 ~ 30 meters (75 ~ 90 ft) • Using waterproof metal crust (IP67 standard) • Automatic backlight compensatory function • Automatic tracking white balance Model Name GS306B Pick-Up Device 1/3" Sony CCD Number of Pixels 512(H) x 492(V) System of Signal NTSC/PAL Horizontal Resolution 520TV Lines Minimum Illumination 0 Lux Lens CS Mount, 3.6mm (90°) Backlight Compensation On/Off Electronic Shutter 1/50(1/60)~1/100,000sec White Balance Auto S/N Ratio >48db Gamma Correction >0.45 Operation Temperature -20°C~50°C (-4°F ~ 122°F) Sync System Internal Video Output ≤1.2Vp-p/75Ω Power Source Supply DC12V, ≥750mA Weight Approx. 2 lb Dimension 102x58 mm (4x2.3 in) Samples in next post. Mark
  9. I've been having the same issue for the last several days. When I try to upload an attachment (not just a link to an off-site image), I keep getting the message "Could not access ftp directory: 'attachments/thumbs'. Please check your FTP Settings." Anyone else having this trouble? Is the forum out of space? Thanks, Mark
  10. It's an AV Tech 760, the one with a network port but no USB or CD/DVD. The manual covers five models and refers to this as "Model 3". In the Product Description, under Video Compression Format, it says: "Frame: MJPEG; CIF: MPEG4". The CIF quality seems much worse than Frame when paused. Maybe CIF does a better job of capturing motion; otherwise, I'm not sure why it's in there at all. Mark
  11. No worries; I appreciate your help. I uninstalled the Intel Create and Share, and while that leaves behind a basic driver, it doesn't seem to allow selecting the video in port on the webcam. So AmCap won't work unless I re-install all the Intel stuff. Setting aside capture, just eyeballing the video playback on my cheapo b/w monitor, I can see just as much distortion in the IR images as I saw in the captured images that I already posted. Conversely, watching the _live_ monitor (even hooked up through the DVR), the IR image looks sharper than during playback, and the "color" image looks very sharp. So I think the monitor and camera are doing pretty well, and the captures are representing them accurately. It's the DVR that is sucking out the most quality. What settings do you use for AV Tech recording? I have mine set to Frame mode, Best quality, 30 fps when detecting motion. I may add 7 fps for "manual" record (which basically runs all the time), but the problem doesn't seem to be the frame rate, but rather the quality of each frame. All of this is with one camera--will it bog down if I connect more? I wonder if increasing the contrast setting in the DVR for this camera would help. Unfortunately, there's no way to do that for IR mode only. The other camera should arrive tomorrow (today). More to play with. Mark
  12. AmCap compression was set to None. I don't see a Quality setting.
  13. That AmCap is a svelt little program. It'd be great if I could use that instead of the Intel bloatware. I'll have to see if it can access the video in port of the Intel webcam after I uninstall the Intell Create and Share software. Tried to upload the same image captured through AmCap as a still capture, but I'm getting an error after I click on "Add Attachment": "Could not access ftp directory: 'attachments/thumbs'. Please check your FTP Settings." Anyway, the version from the Intel software looks just a little bit better to me. It's also 70KB instead of AmCap's 25KB. Mark
  14. Well I have an old Intel USB webcam here that allows hooking up an external video source and capturing images. Not an ideal solution, but I thought I'd see how it compares to what I posted the other day. First to clarify, the snapshots posted above were captured from the DVR software, but they were captured during paused DVR playback, not after saving the file on the computer. The white time stamp is the time of the capture; the yellow timestamp is the time the image was recorded. I connected the camera directly to the USB interface and captured a couple new shots, #1 and #2 below. Then I went back to that same frame on the DVR and captured it directly from the DVR to the PC via the USB interface. That's #3 below. So it looks to me like the camera by itself itself is decent with ambient lighting, and almost okay with IR. The DVR recording loses quality (though it actually preserves motion pretty well). Playing back the recording through the web interface makes an IR picture almost useless. I can live with the understanding that web playback is poor as long as I can capture acceptable quality, should it ever be needed, directly from the DVR. At this point it's borderline whether this DVR is good enough even for that. (By the way, anyone ever try a DigiMerge DGR204 DVR? I could probably still get one of those instead--see my post on the DVR forum.) I'll see what I can learn (and afford) about true day/night cameras. I think there are some posts on b/w cameras too. I'd rather have good nighttime quality than daytime color. Thanks for your help, Mark
  15. Rory, So am I getting the message that you prefer PC-based DVR for a low-end solution? Here is a pic of the camera cables. The gray is a power/video cable that I was worried is too thin. The black is the old Thin Ethernet network cable, labeled RG58A/U, which for the video alone is as thick as the gray cable with both power and video. A penny for size comparison... Mark
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