jamesetherton99 0 Posted September 15, 2012 How is it possible for the ¼” CCD to have more “effective pixels” than the larger 1/3” CCD camera. Here are the two cameras I am looking at: Camera Specifications Model GW648W Image Sensor 1/3" SONY CCD Effective Pixel NTSC: 768(H)x494(V) Sensor area 4.9mm x 3.7mm Horizontal Resolution 540TV Lines Minimum Illumination 0.0 Lux (IR LED ON) Electronic shutter Auto: 1/50(1/60) ~ 1/100,000Sec S/N Ratio >48dB Gamma 0.45 Lens 3.6mm Video Output 1. 0Vp - p, 75Ω IR wave length 850nm Power supply DC12V±10% Power consumption IR Distance 20M (65.6 ft with 24 Unit infrared LED) Camera Specifications Model GW648 Image Sensor 1/4" SONY CCD Effective Pixel NTSC: 811(H)x508(V) Horizontal Resolution 540TV Lines S/N Ratio >48dB Clock Frequency (MHz) NTSC: 19.0699 Scanning System 2:1 Interlace Minimum Illumination 0.0 Lux (IR LED ON) Synchronous System Internal, Negative sync. Auto Electronic Shutter NTSC: 1/60s~1/100,000s Gamma 0.45 IR Distance 20M (65.6 ft with 24 Unit infrared LED) IR Status Under 10 Lux by CDS IR Power On CDS Auto Control Video Output 1. 0Vp - p, 75Ω Auto Gain Control Auto Power/Current DC12V±10%/500mA Lens 3.6mm Dimension (mm) 126x69x67 Weight (g) 700 Storage Temperature -30 ~ +60˚C Operating Temperature -10 ~ +45˚C Also, I notice that when I research the 1/3" CCD camera above, that I get conflicting TVL's on a different website. It tells me 480TVL. Now I am really confused. What's the deal with a particular camera's specs. giving two different TVL specs? Am I being lied to? Thanks. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jamesetherton99 0 Posted September 20, 2012 Well, I did speak to the tech. staff of this camera wholesaler (shoppingcctv.com) and was told that they had an upgrade to all 1/3" CCD's. They then corrected the specs. on the website and list these two cameras as both being 1/3" CCD's and both as being 540 TVL cameras. However, they "effective pixels" are still higher on one camera. I tried to google the exact meaning of "effective pixels" and couldn't really get a satisfactory definition (not being a CCTV camera expert). Can somebody please tell me if the "effective pixel" spec. is something to take into consideration and if I should buy the camera with the most effective pixels, all other specs. being the same? i asked the staff about this, but they really couldn't tell me, saying instead that they "upgraded the CCD's and made the changes" on their website. Thanks. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
yakky 0 Posted September 20, 2012 Effective pixels is marketing speak. If its over 500 lines and you are recording in D1, you are probably not going to get anything better using that spec. In fact shopping cameras using line specs is a TERRIBLE idea. I'd rather take a 380 line TDN+WDR camera over the latest cheapo 700 line camera. Regarding CCD size, you can vary the amount of pixels in the same image sensor size, there is no rule saying you have to have a 1/3" sensor to get over 700 lines. The sensor can use smaller or larger pixels. Cellphones have very small sensors and are over 5mp. For more info on that, google "The Megapixel myth" it realates to photography in general but it will clarify the issue for you. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Toaster 0 Posted September 20, 2012 Cellphones have very small sensors and are over 5mp. I never thought of that. " title="Applause" /> I will say this, along the same topic, I don't understand how CCTV camera's produce such radically different image quality versus a consumer grade camcorder. Watching CCTV footage from an analog system, then compared to some old home movies from a SD camcorder... wow.. the camcorder is so much better. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
yakky 0 Posted September 21, 2012 Cellphones have very small sensors and are over 5mp. I never thought of that. " title="Applause" /> I will say this, along the same topic, I don't understand how CCTV camera's produce such radically different image quality versus a consumer grade camcorder. Watching CCTV footage from an analog system, then compared to some old home movies from a SD camcorder... wow.. the camcorder is so much better. Two big factors.... Lens quality and image tuning. The camcorder is going to have a much better lens than most cheaper CCTV cams. Second, the image on CCTV systems is usually tuned for wide dynamic range and isn't optimized for pleasing colors. That said, I'll put my QVIS Eye 34's against any old SD camcorder. I have older youtubes shot with a quality Canon camcorder and to me the D1 output from my modern cameras is better as far as general IQ goes. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites