Jump to content

vector18

Members
  • Content Count

    1,111
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

Posts posted by vector18


  1. I'm not the one that started talking about 1000+ camera systems.......

    Yes but you're the one who started talking about 960H when the OP was asking about D1. Since you changed the subject, so did I.

     

    Talking about 960h DVrs has something to do with what he was asking. That's not changing the subject as you did by talking about 1000+ camera systems. You need to stop.


  2. Shockwave is right. It doesn't matter how good your cameras are. You need tight shots for facial recognition which means to cover more areas, you need more cameras. Just upgrading your dvr alone will not make what you have better.

     

    And no, I do not have ADD, I just do not like people telling me something when they are wrong.


  3. I guess your one of those that do not read the entire post? He JUST asked a question if his current dvr does something so I told him that he never told us what he currently has. Than he told us that's it's a vanilla hdd with h264 compression. So please read every post before you make any ____ comments!


  4. When viewing a 700tvl camera on a 960h dvr next to a 520tvl camera on a D1 dvr on the same monitor, you are not going to see a difference. But zoom into something and you will see a difference. As far as chips go, I agree, some are better than others when it comes to colors and noise reduction at night.


  5. If you want even higher than D1 but don't want to spend the money for megapixel, you also have the choice

    for a 960H Dvr and 700tvl cameras just FYI. For just a tad bit more, I'd rather go with megapixel cameras

    and an NVR with multiple hard drives. Even streaming over the net is a higher resolution on NVR's as long

    as your bandwidth can handle it.


  6. Which dvr do you currently have so we can make a comparison? And how are you viewing the cameras? If it's

    on a large screen, than D1 will be much better than say a qcif,cif, or less. If if you want to playback video

    and zoom in on something, the higher resolution recorded means the less pixelated the image will be.

     

×