buckeyefarmer
Epic Contributor
Bought me another 4M amcrest camera with zoom, and installed another 3M amcrest yesterday. I like the notification feature for when there is motion.


Is there any reason why a person could not drop the frame rate on a 4K camera to the point the CPU can keep up compared to 1080P? It would seem a frame rate of 5 or 7 per second would be adequate, even less. We are not talking evidentiary video. I would rather see clearly what I am looking at vs smooth motion.Here is an example of 1080P vs 4K. Keep in mind, quality is much better on TV than on phone. View attachment 581431
Is there any reason why a person could not drop the frame rate on a 4K camera to the point the CPU can keep up compared to 1080P? It would seem a frame rate of 5 or 7 per second would be adequate, even less. We are not talking evidentiary video. I would rather see clearly what I am looking at vs smooth motion.
Just lay boards around with sharpened nails in them...leaves scattered on top.Been following this closely. The wife and I just bought 50 acres, with the intent of building a house at some point and retiring there. Was going to put up a barn next year, with a small ‘apartment’ in it for weekend stays.
The place is an hour from my house...what can I possibly do (other than call the police) if I were to pickup a breakin on camera? My architect friend says ‘that’s what insurance is for’...and while I get that, it sure would be nice to keep an eye on the place at anytime from my phone.
I agree about the tweekers being the primary concern...but at the same time...they are so messed up they couldn’t care less about a camera.
Anyway..love reading about the options...please keep them coming.

Just lay boards around with sharpened nails in them...leaves scattered on top.
Watch the fun!
(Construction materials)
One of the best security systems I've ever had was when I leased land to a hunt club.<snip>
I like having a friend or neighbor checking at random times also.
<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.
/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.![]()
Update and sample pics
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.
Hooking it up to the Mobley and back to my home router was not REAL easy but maybe I was just too impatient. But it worked fine with the Mobley in a test, both inside with the "home" router present and outside with no other router present.
The software is kludgy and reportedly it will NOT work with blue iris because BI requires some feature the camera lacks (edit -battery operated cam only).
It works as well or better than the netgear pre Arlo offering.
It's easy to pick up and move, runs fine off USB battery charging, has a sharp image. I charged up the battery to 100% on 26 Nov and it's now down to 62% after significant fiddling around, recording videos, taking a lot of snapshots, and I've got the alarm on so every time I walk by it talks to me (no more ads though).
I hung it outside (2 screws in the base to my soffit) so I can see when the Amazon deliverers are coming. That was a 3 minute process.
It seems the PIR range is about 25 feet as I've got it set.
Sample pics:
Daylight
View attachment 580885
Dark
View attachment 580886
/edit - where the pictures were taken is the same place it dropped signal when I took it out before. Don't know what changed.
/edit 2
Added the second camera - should have been simple but
1. would not "link" the scan of the upc code on the base of the 2nd unit, even after turning off the 1st unit. Has an annoying voice and the camera is shaped like something one would throw through a window when frustrated. Entered the code manually.
2. Then when the camera "scans" the generated upc code it would not acknowledge that until I doubled the size of the code (by tapping on my phone screen).
You better be, you OP you. :laughing:Me too Eddie,,, me too.![]()