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Posts posted by Securame
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not a slip of the tongue ill stand by it. cameras to be used at alert motion back to dvr to send report or alert does not work hence why i said beams. also beams are more reliable than PIR (which give the same problem false alarms)I do think it does work great, but with some "but"s.
I do have motion detection with email alert at my shop, and I think it works great (it gets "tested" once in a while when someone stays here until late, and once a week when they come clean at 8:00). I get notified by email+screenshots whenever there is movement on 4 cameras, weekdays from 20:00 to 09:00, 24 hours on weekends. It did need some tweaking the first days, but I have not had to touch it again. They are all indoor cameras. I did have to remove the alerts on 2 IR cameras, since anything flying near it at night (bugs), would make the DVR email me. I did leave 4 other cameras with MD+email(without IR, but seing with the IR from other cameras), those do not give me any false positives, ever (at least until today).
That said, I am sure it would not work in this case, since they are all outdoors cameras. There would be tons of false positives, video MD on outdoors cameras will always have them. If you want email alerts, you will need to use the alarm inputs with beams or whatever else can help there.
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LOL I'va had plenty of those too...
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I don't know if there are different "ratings" for explosion-proof capabilities, but this one above really doesn't look so much "explosion proof" to me... But you can't really tell just from a picture.
Others like this do like more "explosion proof" to me:
http://www.ptscctv.com/ProductShow.asp?ID=176
http://www.ptscctv.com/ProductShow.asp?ID=188
http://www.ptscctv.com/ProductShow.asp?ID=174
Looks like googling for "dome ExdⅡCT6" might help:
http://www.foresight-systech.com/product.php?category=3&open=1
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I know this has been asked before over the years, but here is the same subject again
Is there any easy way of accessing Hikvision DVRs from Mac? (besides using a Windows virtual machine, Bootcamp to boot up in Windows, etc). Even if it has to be done with a third party software.
I think Hikvision recently announced Mac and Linux clients to be released soon (in some Taiwan fair?), but I do not know when. I can not even confirm it, but I have been told so from my Hikvision supplier, so I will trust them, but I would like to know if there is any way to currently access Hikvision DVRs from Mac.
Thanks!
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You can open the files from Hikvision File Player, and from there export to any commonf video formats.
http://www.hikvisionusa.com/downloads.html
Search for "Hikvision File Player V6.004 (5.13.10)"
About exporting from video file to JPGs/PNGs, no clue, but once you have a video file you can open easily (Windows Media Player, VLC, Adobe Premiere, etc) I am sure you will be able to find any other tools you want for working on those video files.
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Hey mayfair,
If you need any help, I am in Barcelona!
Welcome!
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Someone? Please? I'm trying to PTZ my cams via iPhone for a bout half a year..Your time is not worth anything?
If it is, maybe it is about time to burn that damn DVR, and get a good one
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For just a little more $$ you can have DS-4216HFVI instead of DS-4216HCI.
I say go for HFVI, which does 4CIF 25fps on each channel, instead of HCI, which is 2CIF 25fps each channel (half resolution of HFVI).
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I am pretty sure they know already.
I was warned the first time maybe on tuesday, by a customer that told me he had updated iVMS4500 on his iPhone the night before, and he had been unable to use the program since then. Hikvision pulled iVMS4500 from the app store soon after, so I am sure they broke something, and removed the program from the app store until they get it fixed.
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Here is a taste of what can be done ...http://www.bahamassecurity.com/articles/dahuapssliteskin.asp
^^
Page not found
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Generally speaking, the smaller the figure the wider the angle but that is not quite it.a 2.8 mm lens has view angle of 129 deg. and a 12 mm lens has a view angle of 28 deg. a 6 mm lens an angle of 32 deg and a 50 mm an angle of approx 5.5 degrees.
Where did you get those numbers from? Not saying that they are wrong, I just would like to find an online lens/angle calculator I can trust. I usually use the following:
http://www.sweeting.org/mark/lenses/cctv.php
Which says that 1/3" with 2.8mm would be 81º; I do think that it is more closer to 129º than 81º, I would love to see an online tool like the one linked above that I can know for sure is accurate
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rory, I think you need a Dahua subforum...
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Seeing that the topic is solved, offtopic time!
I think Dahua used to have the firmwares for download on their web site. I really think I had seen them... sometime in the past. Not any more, now the "Firmware" section on their web page just shows "The material is being gathered" I never bothered downloading any firmwares, since I was only interested on multilanguage (spanish) firmware.
Now, I was contacted by my supplier about a week ago, they told me they finally had the spanish firmwares. Good for me! I asked if they could send them to me, and they said nope, e can't supply you the firmware, but we can upload any DVRs you need updated. Just plug them on your network, forward port 37777 TCP, give us the IP, and let us do the job.
And they did, indeed. First thing I thought was "I hope this DVRs do not start upgrading the firmware until the whole file has been uploaded", but we didn't have any problems. I had to connect one by one all the DVRs we had in store with the old english firmwares, and they upgraded remotely all the firmwares.
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I hardly use (myself) PC based DVRs, just for tests, seting up for customers, selling them, etc. I am more a "standalone" guy.
I have just used Netvision trial; but if you buy the hardware for them, you get the software license included on the price.
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That was so lame from me... Now that I knew what I was looking for, I found it easily on Dahua's web site. I wonder why on each product page they put a "download" tab, and there is only the datasheet pdf in there.
On the download section I had seen the LE-S/HE-T manuals, but I was looking for the LE-U series, which seems to be the same as the LE-S series, but with 8 SATA ports instead of just 4.
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This one, right?
Thanks!
LE-S&HE-T Series DVR User's Manual V2.606 0911.pdf
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Hi,
I got 3 days ago a Dahua DH-DVR3204LE-U DVR (32ch), and it came with a deffective CD; I can see the contents on the CD, but I can not open the files. I am in need of geting the manual for this DVR quickly, and I have been waiting 2 days for an answer from my supplier with no luck.
Does anyone know where to get the PDF manual for this model? I am unable to find it on Dahua's web site. If anyone can send me a ISO of the full CD that would be great (with yousendit.com or some web site like that it would be great).
Thanks!
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well you guys all helped me allot, would you happen to know the numbers for hikvision, i also need to ask them what format the videos are in becuase we copied a few unto a USB stick but they dont play back at all, they say mp4 but i get errors when trying to play them on my macinstosh, even with VLC which usually plays any format.http://www.hikvisionusa.com/downloads.html
Tools section, "file player" is for playing the videos under Windows, "file convertor" is for exporting them to common formats so they can be played back directly from any video player like VLC.
Noone from Hikvision should be expected to help you configure your router/open your ports, that has nothing to do with their product.
I am aware of the local network and exterior IPs, the problem is this DVR requires a PC to configure it, as i mentioned in the prior post the MACINSTOSH web browsers do not work with the DVR, which i find very strange.It works with Activex, which is a technology for Internet Explorer. I am sure there are ways to make it work on Apple, never had to do it before. And you can also change any settings locally from the DVR, you just need a monitor and mouse.
If you use exclusively Mac, maybe Hikvision wasn't the right choice of DVR, maybe you would have been better with Dahua, which has software for Mac.
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If you use the camera wired, there are no interferences. You can connect any of the 4 cameras direct to a TV, and you will have a good image (a good, cheap, 380 lines CMOS image, that is).
Connecting the camera wired will not stop the transmitter. They work at the same time wired, and wireless. You could wire them to a DVR somewhere in order to record them, and connect the receiver on a TV somewhere else on the house to view them; when viewing them, you would of course have worse image quality.
It all depends on the quality you need, and what you want to do with the kit. You need to see the kids playing on the yard, who is ringing your doorbell? Might be enough. You want to be able to catch a thief who breaks on your house when away, and have any good shots of their face? I doubt it.
When you say you see nothing weird does that mean that the black screen is a normal thing even when hard wired?The video you uploaded is wireless, not wired.
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The fact that you can connect to your DVR from inside your network has nothing to do with connecting from outside.
Inside your network you will connect to your lan IP, something like 192.168.1.x, you should be able to connect easily to it from any computer, or even from your iPhone if you are using your wifi; you MUST use the lan IP.
From outside; you need to have the right ports forwarded to the DVR IP. And, of course, you must try to connect to it from outside the network, and connect to your wan IP, not the lan IP. If you do not know what is your IP: http://www.whatismyip.com/
For testing; it will be WAY easier to do it from a Windows computer then from your iPhone, I usually just connect remotely to my home computer, and from there try to connect to the DVR I am configuring.
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No,which is why I said,"Do these cameras have these built in internally or is that just part of the software that would work if the correct cameras were used?".All DVRs have PTZ controls, all DVR softwares have PTZ controls... That of course are only useful if you have PTZ cameras, and will do nothing with a camera that has no moving parts at all.
Back on topic; as they have told you already, this kit is just a toy. 2.4G wireless (which anyone else can use/view, even your computer wifi could be causing interferences), maximum distance 100m with view from camera to receiver (which will never happen). The video you posted above does not show anything weird to me, it just shows me that you need to move the camera closer to the receiver.
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Which was why I asked the question,the manual states the ability is there.Do you see anything on those cameras that make you think they are going to move?

You want pan/tilt? Push the camera gently on any given direction. Want some zoom? Grab the camera and move it forward.
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Another thing is the ptz,it doesn't work.Do these cameras have these built in internally or is that just part of the software that would work if the correct cameras were used?PTZ...!?!?


Video and electricity tester
in General Digital Discussion
Posted
Nice ghetto tester, yup... I bet if you ever have a hands free for your phone, it will look like this one:
http://blaza.ytmnd.com/