ipman
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Everything posted by ipman
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Robert, it looks like the trick is in arecont "% Motion Detection Activity" parameter. On your arecont screenshot you have option "50% motion activity" selected. But in the IP Video Tool you have 100% recording. You can just specify "50%" recording activity and get almost the same result - BW: 33.9 MBit (32) HDD:2.5TB (2.4)
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It would be an offtopic here, but I have made a test of BW calculation with Arecont and Axis calc: Bandwidth, MBit/s (2MegaPixel, 6 FPS, Parking Lot): Compression | Arecont | JVSG 5.3 | AXIS --------------------------------------------------------------------- Low Compression (MJPG-10 HighQuality) | 13 | 13.6 | 12 Medium Compression (MJPG-50 LowQuality) | 7 | 7.4 | 6.3 Hi Compression (MJPG-70 Poor Quality) | 5 | 5.85 | 5.3 HDD storage space (30 days, 100% recording): Compression | JVSG 5.3 | Arecont | AXIS --------------------------------------------------------------------- Low Compression (MJPG-10 HighQuality) | 4.3 | 4 | 3.6 Medium Compression (MJPG-50 LowQuality) | 2.4 | 2.4 | 1.9 Hi Compression (MJPG-70 Poor Quality) | 1.79 | 1.75 | 1.6 I would say BW&HDD space estimations are surprisingly accurate
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Well, Robert I am not agree. I would say the View Designer is too basic. It even calculates horizontal projection wrongly. Lets make a small test: Camera Installation Height = 6.5 m Sensor Size = 1/3" Lens focal length = 4 mm Distance = 10 m Object size = 1.8 m, like here Let's see horizontal projection in "IP Video System Design Tool 5.3", "Video Cad6" and "View Designer 1.0". Additionally imagine you put a 1.8m tall man at 4m distance from camera and 3.3m on the right (orange man - in JVSG at mouse cursor position). As you can see man at (4m; 3.3m) is visible but View Designer shows the max right position at 4.5m/2 = 2.25 m. But it is not correct. Please download JVSG tool and compare results yourself.
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Thanks thewireguys, I will give it a try
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What is the highest CCTV camera resolution?
ipman replied to cctv_addicted's topic in Security Cameras
I have tried plenty megapixel cameras from AXIS and ArecontVision. 1.3 MPixel is a great resolution. It really gives visible advantages in compare with 4CIF or 640x480. IMHO camera images with 2 and 3 Megapixel resolution doesn't look more detailed in compare with 1 MP. -
Previous answer is correct, but strictly speaking you should also consider camera installation height. For example, if you put camera on 25 meters pole you will get 18 mm for 1/4" camera and 12 mm for 1/4" It is very easy to calculate lens and FOV using CCTV Design Tool
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The post above shows it is not easy to select lens. I recommend software utility ver. 5.3 from http://www.jvsg.com - you see what you get because of 3D-preview. - you have exact calulations of focal length, field of view, angles and other staff. It does make sense to have a look.
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Active Webcam by PYSOFT Pro's Con's
ipman replied to mantry's topic in DVR Cards and Software - PC Based Systems
Hi Mark, Actually the software is not bad. But their support is ... BTW coupon code I found: ACTW-WJ3K-HAPR -
Megapixel video recorder
ipman replied to deserteaglexxx's topic in IP/Megapixel Cameras and Software Solutions
I have run 9 arecont cameras (3 MP -AV3100) with Luxriot Pro on Intel Core Quad processor 2.4 GHZ. And it works. -
IP CCTV newbie! Some general home-user questions!
ipman replied to TonyC32's topic in IP/Megapixel Cameras and Software Solutions
Tony, in my opinion you don't need vario lens, because of such short distance. For 18 ft and typical 1/4" IP camera you need lens with focal length not more than 4 mm. See picture for 3.3 mm lens bellow: I don't know what is the best camera height, so you can play yourself with paper calculator or lens calculation software. But, probably it is better to put camera on second floor. -
VideoCAD - comments from en cctv system xperience users
ipman replied to jayzap's topic in System Design
I use the same PaintShopPro as you (ver 4.0 from 1996). -
how i can calculate the storage needs?
ipman replied to ee01003's topic in General Digital Discussion
Actually there is no formula for it, because the compression is not a linear process, but there are many software bandwidth calculators: http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=ip+camera+calculator&btnG=Google+Search Just enter your resolution, compression, FPS, number of cameras and get the result. -
Top 10 Open IP Video Management Software
ipman replied to securityme's topic in IP/Megapixel Cameras and Software Solutions
Apart from already mentioned software thiere is a top 20 HOME surveillance software list. But it is mostly for home usage and it looks the main criteria is price/features. -
At first I would find a best FPS/compression/bandwith proportion for your cameras. You can do it with any IP camera calculator. Practical bandwith of 1Gbit LAN is about 500 mbits. So for 200 cameras you shold have a camera bandwith of 2.5 mbits. Than you can figure out your compression/FPS.
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Need basic home outdoor system recommendation
ipman replied to Jersey Joe's topic in General Digital Discussion
But personally I would use network cameras only. -
Need basic home outdoor system recommendation
ipman replied to Jersey Joe's topic in General Digital Discussion
In addition to that there is a visual calculator for focal length (30 days trial). I found it very useful during planning of my video surveillance projects. -
Sometimes, you have to figure out the lens focal-length before location is acessible - like second floor of a building in process of contraction.
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Sure you can google many different field of view calculators. Some of them go in 3D. If you have time can give a try to "CCTV Design Tool" See video tutorials
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Recommendations on a new IP-Based System (Nooob Posting)
ipman replied to agenergy's topic in IP/Megapixel Cameras and Software Solutions
I would advise prior the installation to use IP Camera Calculator to see what the storage space and network traffic is required for your 16 cameras -
Has anyone heard of this IP Software
ipman replied to cctv_down_under's topic in IP/Megapixel Cameras and Software Solutions
I was trying to download it, but it is written on their website: "Windows Version. Requires Reseller password." How you bypassed the problem? -
Vista - any IP camera software or DVR cards that support
ipman replied to FunkyRX's topic in General Digital Discussion
I tried to run some video surveillance software from work on Vista with no success. Actually it is pain just to install software under vista. -
megapixel cameras and IP cameras
ipman replied to blowrabbit's topic in IP/Megapixel Cameras and Software Solutions
Exactly. Like if you take AXIS 206M - 1 megapixel camera - the picture looks exactly the same as AXIS 206 640x480 if you just zoom in photoshop. It is not the only one example. Once I took the Mobotix M10 1MPix camera, that camera costs about 1000 EUR, and the picture was really the same as 640x480. Optical resolution of the lens is a problem for megapixel cameras. I havn't found any zoom or variofocal lens yet. -
megapixel cameras and IP cameras
ipman replied to blowrabbit's topic in IP/Megapixel Cameras and Software Solutions
Thats right! 1. For example 3 mpixel camera can give a single frame from 150 to 600 Kb and with 25 FPS can use whole 100 MBit Ethernet just for one camera. Personally I think you have to play with a bandwidth calculator for a twenty minutes before to get a impression what the megapixel cameras are consuming. 2. The second problem with a megapixel camera is a proper lens for it. A typical CCTV lens has optical resolution about 0.6 MPix. Initially I didn't found any proper lens, and was in panic but later I found couple of them from Tamron and Pentax. Actually there are some mpixel lens, but I found only fixed ones. So it will be nice to check the lens before!