ebourlet 0 Posted October 15, 2012 At a new office that we are using Pelco Sarix cameras we have a problem with scroll bars showing up on the cameras when the LED lighting is dimmed below full brightness. These are IP cameras and I suspect that it has to do with the LED dimmer using a high frequency pulse with modulation scheme that results in the lighting actually flashing at a rate that is not perceptible to the human eye but is to the camera resulting in a beat pattern between the camera and the lighting. Please don't respond with things like "it a ground loop" .... If you have first hand experience with a similar situation involving LED dimmers and CCTV I would appreciate hearing your thoughts on how I can mitigate the problem. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ak357 0 Posted October 15, 2012 At a new office that we are using Pelco Sarix cameras we have a problem with scroll bars showing up on the cameras when the LED lighting is dimmed below full brightness. These are IP cameras and I suspect that it has to do with the LED dimmer using a high frequency pulse with modulation scheme that results in the lighting actually flashing at a rate that is not perceptible to the human eye but is to the camera resulting in a beat pattern between the camera and the lighting. Please don't respond with things like "it a ground loop" .... If you have first hand experience with a similar situation involving LED dimmers and CCTV I would appreciate hearing your thoughts on how I can mitigate the problem. Something like this ? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ebourlet 0 Posted October 16, 2012 Yes upon further research I believe it is caused by a PWM dimmer they should have used a CWM dimer Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ak357 0 Posted October 16, 2012 Yes upon further research I believe it is caused by a PWM dimmer they should have used a CWM dimer I know Pulse Width Modulations what is CWM ? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
GrouchoBoucho 0 Posted October 16, 2012 see if the camera has a "flicker control" setting... then try playing with the shutter speed. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites