shockwave199 0 Posted July 15, 2014 What appears to be dahua's most throughput nvr at 200mbps is widely available and amazingly inexpensive. Does anyone know the 4200 series and have any opinions? http://www.dahuasecurity.com/products/nvr420842164232-8p-640.html Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
shockwave199 0 Posted July 15, 2014 Bump once just in case someone knows Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
buellwinkle 0 Posted July 15, 2014 It's part of their Lite series which has better pricing like the 1080P bullet I reviewed that's like $40 less than their previous 1080P bullet. What looks like it may be cool is the NVR104 or 108 that's tiny, 7.5" x 5" x 1.4". Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
shockwave199 0 Posted July 15, 2014 Well I guess I'm interested in what makes it "light"? The specs show it to be their highest throughput nvr @ 200mbps. Nothing light about that! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
buellwinkle 0 Posted July 15, 2014 Lite in price, not necessarily performance. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
milkisbad 0 Posted July 16, 2014 Might be something similar to what Hikvision did in early 2013...their 16 ch and 32 ch NVR was rated for 40 Mbps and 80 Mbps respectively. Then a few months went by and some firmware upgrade doubled their recording bandwidth to 80 Mbps and 160 Mbps. Hardware was kept the same. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
shockwave199 0 Posted July 16, 2014 Interesting. Well for an nvr, 200mbps is the best I've seen so far. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
milkisbad 0 Posted July 16, 2014 Hmm maybe also economy of scale...looks like they use the same hardware regardless of channel numbers (one machine for 4,8,16,32 chs) . Where as Hikvision makes a different machine for 4 ch, 8 ch, 16 ch and 32 ch. But the question is the max bitrate per camera that NVR is rated for is 8192. Even 16 cameras at max bitrate will only needs 132 Mbps. Only actual use for the 42xx series would be for the 32 channel model one i think. Unless they are priced very cheaply to use it for all channel numbers. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
dexterash 0 Posted July 16, 2014 But the question is the max bitrate per camera that NVR is rated for is 8192. Even 16 cameras at max bitrate will only needs 132 Mbps. 8192 just for Main Stream. Extra stream needs some bandwidth too and the NVR connects both to extra and main. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gunwonn 0 Posted July 16, 2014 What appears to be dahua's most throughput nvr at 200mbps is widely available and amazingly inexpensive.Hopefully this is an indication of the realization that IP cameras do not have magical properties and that prices shouldn't reflect those magical properties either. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
dexterash 0 Posted July 16, 2014 The technology is getting cheaper. Same as what happened with smartphones, tablets, SmartTVs etc. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
MaxIcon 0 Posted July 16, 2014 Generally, you don't even need 8192 kbps unless you're running a high frame rate. I see no obvious difference between 8192 and 4096 kbps at 10 fps, even with lots of motion and detail. YMMV, as always. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
voip-ninja 0 Posted July 18, 2014 What appears to be dahua's most throughput nvr at 200mbps is widely available and amazingly inexpensive.Hopefully this is an indication of the realization that IP cameras do not have magical properties and that prices shouldn't reflect those magical properties either. I'm not sure what you are arguing about, that every camera should be $50 and every NVR should only cost a few more than the PC components needed to put it together by the manufacturer? What you are paying for with IP cams and NVRs/software is not only the cost of the device but the engineering, support and features that the devices offer. You seem to be advocating for a "race to the bottom" as we've seen in the PC industry where now most of what is out there is cheap badly assembled junk, but hey it's cheap! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
milkisbad 0 Posted July 18, 2014 As a supplier, Profit margin on these equipment (which is already pretty thin) compared to 3 years ago has dropped alot...maybe by 30%, and that's if nothing happens and they don't need to use their warranty. After RMA/credit card fees they can only stay in business by cutting services/salary for us. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites