MacLawn
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Aug 1, 2007
- Messages
- 1,418
- Tractor
- JD 2210
Industrial, about same as calling wife on phone, "Hey, it's me." Well I'll be a suckeggedmule, I'd never have figured that out.
I got my Reolink Go the Wed before Thanksgiving. I have it setup in the backyard right now, I'm planning to move it out to my deer feeder to see how well it will work as a live video feed for the cellular activated wild hog traps I build. There are some things I like about it and some I don't. The resolution is plenty good and it seems to be pretty reliable thus far. I'm having a hard time getting the push notifications through the app to also play a sound (a necessity for what I want to use it for, pigs always come when you're asleep) and it would be really nice to have the option to connect to it from a computer instead of only a phone or tablet. I'm going to keep messing with it, if I can get the notification sounds working, I think it'll do for what I want it for. The camera and data are both cheaper than going with an Arlo, which was what I was considering originally.
Hey do post here unless it is personal... Richard already expressed he is not concerned about thread creep. I think my ReoLink bullet cameras are arriving tomorrow!I just sent you a private message. I have questions about the ReoLink Go
Hey do post here unless it is personal... Richard already expressed he is not concerned about thread creep. I think my ReoLink bullet cameras are arriving tomorrow!
Need to reference by post numbers, especially in long threads. I'm set at 40 posts per page, thus that thread is less than one page for me. This post is #148 an page 4 for me.<snip>
You can read more about my experience with the ReoLink Go on pages 3 and 4 of this thread. https://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/rural-living/380424-cellular-game-camera-suggestions-3.html
Holy smokes... my dad had one as well and I am not sure if I still have it (box somewhere) or it found its way to goodwill during our move 10 years ago! Still have his Polaroid and a Brownie somewhere too I think./edit - I just realized this is my second experience with an Argus camera, I think I still have a 1960's Argus C3 35mm inherited from my Father. It too was wireless, even batteryless.![]()

erk, I am pretty sure I am going with Blue Iris as well.I concur that Blue Iris is the way to go. I've been using it for the last 7+ years. The developer, Ken, is available and responsive. I'd pay 10x the cost just support his genius.
I currently have 35 cameras - mostly Hikvision and Dahua PoE IP cameras. The program is on a dedicated i7-4XXX machine running windows 10. The CPU runs between 60 and 80% (depending on the activity level of the cameras), and I have about half the cameras set to 15 FPS, with the remaining set to 25 and 30 FPS. Most are set to 1080P.
All but about 5 of the cameras are hardwired. And some runs approach 500'. The max distance for cat5/6 cable is about 330', but if you use solid copper (23ga) you can push it to about 450' w/o issue. If you need to go longer, you can get mid-span switches that act as a signal booster.
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erk, I am pretty sure I am going with Blue Iris as well.
Curious to know what your RAM size is?
BTW... my Reolink cameras arrived today. Haven't unpackaged them yet... can't wait to change out my dead Lorex system to a POE system. I got some CAT6 wiring to fish using my old BNC cables.
Realizing now that my hard disk storage space isn't the issue as much as having enough CPU power and RAM to allow multiple camera recordings at 4K. And for those that love an analogy... it isn't so much a problem of the size of the pond as it is the pipe getting to it!
Played around with one a fair bit. I've been using IP cameras off and on since about 2008 so the software with no FM was a discovery process.<snip>
Now what I really came to this thread for was to write that I rec'd my Reolink Argus 2's. About 20:30 so I'll do the real "playing around" tomorrow.
First look -
Instructions were more than adequate, but then I've worked with computers since IBM put 3 transistors on a chip about 1972.
Very easy to set up, my biggest problem was typing in my password. I'm not a "phone typist". Process was plug battery into camera, plug a micro SD card in, scan QR code on instructions to get software, log in to Google Play and download the software. Scan QR code on camera, it linked to my house router easily, then have camera "scan" phone and it was all set up.
BUT -
Wireless reception is weak, dropped signal about 45 feet and 3 walls from the router where my signal app on the phone showed a signal strength of -70dBm.
<snip>

