Soundy 1 Posted June 8, 2012 Premade cables are almost always low-grade stuff. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
shockwave199 0 Posted June 8, 2012 It also depends on what you consider fuzzy. Analog will only get so good. Post a pic from the cameras- that will tell if it's bad or your expectations are too high with analog. I expect what I see in your videos. All of my cables are premade and what would be considered, low grade stuff. That was my fault in the beginning and now I'm using them until I have to replace them. It's been a little over a year now, so who knows. That being said, if you're using really thin cable, or if the cable is thicker but terminates to really thin bnc/power on the ends of them, that's the cheap stuff. It might be worth checking out a good cable in line and see if that doesn't help. Outside of that, it could be the dvr, the resolutions you have set per channel if you're viewing this remotely, or just the cameras not doing well. We have DW cams at work and they're ok, but noting to write home about either. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Soundy 1 Posted June 8, 2012 We have DW cams at work and they're ok, but noting to write home about either. I wonder what kind of camera one WOULD write home about? "Dear Mom, you should see the fancy cameras they got here in the big city... they're real purty. They gots these tall buildings, too..." Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
pnyxxpress 0 Posted June 10, 2012 I'm throwing the towel and starting over. I'm going to RMA cameras and dvr back. The cable wasn't the issue. I bought 100 ft of RG59 and the video is no different than it is with the less expensive pre-made cables. Looking for guidelance on a residentual build. Based on what learned so far I might need the Dahua 16 Channel NVR Hi Def Network Video Recorder for IP cameras. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
shockwave199 0 Posted June 10, 2012 You mentioned you're in rural darkness at night. Rural darkness at night is like nothing else. My night here in NY is nowhere near as dark as night is up in PA at my dads house. Once you're beyond exterior light there, you can't see the hand in front of your face. So the first thing you want to do is be sure you have exterior light everywhere you plan to point a camera. That goes doubly true if you're gonna use MP cameras. Cameras provide a much improved night picture when you provide exterior light. Even if you buy IR cameras, the picture won't be as good in darkness as it would be with exterior light. At minimum, you should have a steady on exterior light at all doors to the house. On the sides of the house, you can have motion lights that come on only when something or someone trips them and the cameras there could have IR so they can see somewhat when the lights are off. But before your camera system, be sure you have proper lighting installed. Crooks hate that and cameras love it. If you thought my video had a good picture of the Dahua camera, considering the video for youtube is compressed even more, you might be fine with an analog system. If you want the much improved pictures an MP system provides, go for it. But a decent analog setup might be all you need and save you some serious bucks. So many times it seems people make installing a cctv system a HARD thing to accomplish. It doesn't have to be. Simply buy a full D1 dvr, good varifocal cameras, provide adequate exterior lighting, and that's mostly it. And if you can't get past the inherent 'fuzziness' of even the best that analog can give you, go with MP. But make sure your budget is that much bigger. The hardest thing should only be the physical pain of install. There's too much good gear for that part of it to be hard. Good luck Share this post Link to post Share on other sites