engineer2
Well-known member
The Arlo Pro 4-6 mo battery life is a concern and adds to the list of stuff to maintain. People have modded the original Arlo for external power.
Ddawg16. Thanks that is exactly what I was looking for a real example form the cameras, not provided by the company itself.
I was actually checking out the Lorex website before I checked back here. If you dont mind which version is that camera? They have quite a few HD options.
Depending on what time of the year the detached could easily have 150k-200k in cars in it, not all mine but between my father and I. Another 25k in boats and jetskis plus tools, etc.
Yes they all have their own insurance policy but if we are adding up deductibles on everything that could easily be 7-10k to get paid out, plus some of the cars would be hard to replace just do to being in the family for years.
2k in a good camera setup is not out of the question for me.
I just dont want to end up like I did at my last house and 4 years go by and the camera look like they are from the 80s resolution wise.
The Arlo Pro 4-6 mo battery life is a concern and adds to the list of stuff to maintain. People have modded the original Arlo for external power.
Even a weeks storage would be enough for me. Looks like it wouldnt cost to much more to get the 3tb drive.
Do you have the Pro?I'm going to chime in here again... unless you're protecting a vault of gold bullion or a $100,000 gun collection, I'd seriously look at something like Arlo Pro. No wires, no need to setup hard drive storage, and pretty inexpensive. And it's very easy to expand the number of cameras or modify your setup if your needs ever change. The cameras are waterproof, have night vision, are HD quality and seem to fulfill all of your requirements.
https://www.costco.com/Lorex-8-Chan...s-and-1080p-PTZ-Camera.product.100317970.html
Looking at that package and then spending the money to add 2 4k cameras right away does not seem to be a bad price at all. Its cheaper than buying it all from Lorex direct.
pf--I would be very pissed off if I spent 100'$ on a security camera that produced an image like that.
Do you have the Pro?
I'm going to chime in here again... unless you're protecting a vault of gold bullion or a $100,000 gun collection, I'd seriously look at something like Arlo Pro. No wires, no need to setup hard drive storage, and pretty inexpensive. And it's very easy to expand the number of cameras or modify your setup if your needs ever change. The cameras are waterproof, have night vision, are HD quality and seem to fulfill all of your requirements.
I run the Hikvision cameras. (3MP Turrets) and synology diskstation/surveillance station for a solution. Have 6 running and always keep 30 days in rotation. Outdoor camera's record 24/7. The 2 indoor cameras only grab motion. Android/iPhone/PC/Mac support with no annual fees etc.
Do you have them outside? How is the picture quality ?I have the original. When I got mine that was all they had, but it still works well for what I've needed it for so far. I may add a Pro and/or a Q (their wired indoor camera) onto my system in the future though.
Do you have them outside? How is the picture quality ?
They both are 720p but the pro has a wider angle.
What I like about the pro is that it can handle lower temps since it snows where I live.
Does Synology have a working solution to backing up the recordings to the cloud?
https://www.costco.com/Lorex-8-Chan...s-and-1080p-PTZ-Camera.product.100317970.html
Looking at that package and then spending the money to add 2 4k cameras right away does not seem to be a bad price at all. Its cheaper than buying it all from Lorex direct.
$900 is about 2x as much as i'd like to spend. aside from installation simplicity, does POE offer any other advantages?
does samsung make decent systems?:
https://www.samsclub.com/sams/samsung-16ch-1080p-16x10/prod18983443.ip?xid=plp:product:1:1
one last question...was it easy to set up on your computer ?
