DrPhoto 0 Posted January 26, 2013 Hi & I apologies in advance for what is a typical newbie numskull question but I would appreciate some advice anyway. I want to set up a PTZ camera for viewing the birds in my back garden from the front of the house. I would want full D1 res and 25fps - Live viewing and recording when required. I have an ILDVR card which I will use for recording along with a couple of static cams already set up though I may control the PTZ manually with a joystick yet I don't know. I have scanned around the web and come across several cameras & whilst I am not too flush I can't buy twice so I have to get it right first time. I am also worried about the large amount of 'Chinese offerings' out there on ebay and do not know which of them are any good. I am looking at a 1/3rd" chip and would like a nominally 25 - 30x zoom. Could any one advise on a suitable camera that they know is OK? I have come across a system from Inesun on ebay - big worry CCTV 7 inch 650TVL 36X Optical Zoom 3.2~115.2mm Auto Tracking High Speed Dome PTZ IR Camera - Current ebay listed example is 160952801565 Item number: Is this any good or would I just be buying rubbish I would later regret? Any one out there have any experience with such a beast?? or know anythiing similar & more suitable?? I do want this to last but it probably won't won't be running as hard or as often as in usual installations All info greatly received & pointers appreciated. Thanks in advance - DrPhoto & the Birdie Cam Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
shockwave199 0 Posted January 26, 2013 Frequently enough there is a birdwatcher who asks about a ptz. I don't see how a ptz would be helpful. In my experience they just can't keep up with them. Birds are fast and fidgety creatures- more than any ptz would help you appreciate them. Maybe you could zoom in on one at a feeder, but you could have a fixed camera for that. If birdwatchers think they'll gain the ability to have an appreciable view of birds because the camera can move, I think they would be disappointed in the outcome for all the money spent. I would not buy the inesun camera you mention. Interestingly enough however, I am an inesun ptz owner and user- probably the only person you'll find here that is! LOL! I rolled the dice and I bought this one last year- http://www.inesun.com/650TVL-SONY-EFFIO-CCD-27x-Outdoor-CCTV-PTZ-IR-Camera-Auto-Tracking--17165.html If you look through my vids you'll find a number of them covering this camera. I do like it a lot. It has worked perfectly thus far, even through our extended artic cold this past week when at night the temps fell to 2 degrees. I wouldn't use it or any ptz for bird watching, but I do like the camera a lot. But I wouldn't recommend you buy a hong kong camera, frankly. If the camera comes broken or if it breaks, there really isn't any support to fix it. You're not gonna spend 100 dollars or more sending a defective camera back. I took a risk- I wouldn't recommend others do unless you're in a position to do so. For a quality ptz that can be had here in the states, I would suggest this one- http://www.dahuasecurity.com/products/sd6923-6930-6936-6970-h--86.html I use this one as well and it's excellent. I still wouldn't recommend it for bird watching, but if you really want a ptz, this one at least can be bought in the states by a reputable dealer. Good luck! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DrPhoto 0 Posted January 27, 2013 Thanks for getting back & your input. The reason I am after a PTZ is that my current cameras give a general wild field shots of the feeders etc but i would like then to zoom in to particular feeders and get close up shots when applicable. Get your drift re support and it was a concern but I also wonder how many others out there are just badged versions of the same items. I will take a look at the vids & thanks for taking the time to reply. Cheers & beers DrPhoto Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kawboy12R 0 Posted January 28, 2013 For my money I think I'd rather have cameras with zoom lenses trained on each feeder. Then you'd get every feeder all the time and not miss any closeups. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites