Long range security camera

   / Long range security camera #11  
A buddy of mine turned me onto Reolink cameras. He's had his for a couple years now. I just bought a RLC-410, 4MP/1440p, POE, Mic, IP66 housing and motion detection . Decent picture and pretty good pricing $55. They have a couple wifi battery operated ones, one for indoors and another for outdoors, but i have no personal experience.
 
   / Long range security camera #12  
A buddy of mine turned me onto Reolink cameras. He's had his for a couple years now. I just bought a RLC-410, 4MP/1440p, POE, Mic, IP66 housing and motion detection . Decent picture and pretty good pricing $55. They have a couple wifi battery operated ones, one for indoors and another for outdoors, but i have no personal experience.

I have been looking at those. I think I am going to try the RLC-411WS. It is more expensive and doesn't have a mic but I like the idea of a 4X optical zoom. I wish it supported sound but that's not a deal killer.
 
   / Long range security camera #13  
I have been looking at those. I think I am going to try the RLC-411WS. It is more expensive and doesn't have a mic but I like the idea of a 4X optical zoom. I wish it supported sound but that's not a deal killer.

I looked at that one too, it also has SD on-board, which is a nice addition.
 
   / Long range security camera #14  
Years ago, I bought some cool surplus video equipment that some out of the NSA. The lenses are about six inches in diameter. Old technology now, designed to go on a box camera. It is supposed to be on a 27 foot pole looking down six hundred feet of driveway, but I never got a man lift (yet) and the post is too high, and equipment too heavy to get it up there with a ladder.
 
   / Long range security camera #15  
A six inch diameter lens is not necessarily "old technology." That may have some serious resolution at a good distance!

I'm in a similar situation. I tried an extender, but they cut the bandwidth down and didn't have the range. Someone pointed out the directional outdoor wifi antennas. That sounds like it might work for you also.
 
   / Long range security camera #16  
Any wireless video technology would be my absolute last option being in the security industry with lots of bad experience. That applies to security systems as well. Always a last option and then only the most expensive you can afford.
 
   / Long range security camera #17  
A buddy of mine turned me onto Reolink cameras. He's had his for a couple years now. I just bought a RLC-410, 4MP/1440p, POE, Mic, IP66 housing and motion detection . Decent picture and pretty good pricing $55. They have a couple wifi battery operated ones, one for indoors and another for outdoors, but i have no personal experience.

I have been looking at those. I think I am going to try the RLC-411WS. It is more expensive and doesn't have a mic but I like the idea of a 4X optical zoom. I wish it supported sound but that's not a deal killer.

I thought I would follow up with my experience on these cameras so far. I originally attempted to purchase a single camera from USA stock. They had it advertised at $97.49 with free shipping or "make offer". Usually the make offer option indicates they are willing to negotiate. Not so much! I offered $80 and they raised the buy it now price to $129.99 and countered at $95. I figured I would play along and countered at $90 and they countered at $128. At the same time they had lowered the buy it now to $113. This almost made me mad enough not to do business with them but I could not find any cameras at this price point that exceeded a couple of reviews I found on the Tube.

I ended up purchasing a two pack for $175.70 from China stock. They actually got them here in 8 days which is exceptional for coming cross the pond. Note: DHL tracking is messed up. They showed they attempted delivery in the nearest hub city 170 miles away then put the delivery on hold. I had to call them to get them resent but I think they were in my town all along.

My original 1 star review: Installed the android app. It reads the QR code but won't connect to my wifi. Connected cameras by cat5 and set wifi password and they still will not connect wirelessly. I was doing this sitting right beside a wireless router that I have connected to from 500 feet away so I know the signal is good. Software also would not install or work on either of my Win 7 machines. The two cameras received are different shades of white but that is a minor deal compared to them just not being usable.

Updated 3 star review: Reolink support was fairly quick to respond considering the time difference. Early on they sent me to a drop box where I had to create an account to get semi functional software. After several back and forth emails I had to download a program to allow remote access to get support to get these working wireless. In the end they used a browser interface to make the same settings I had attempted with the software they provided. Had they explained the browser interface I could have done it by myself but the important part is they are now working. Fact still remains these did not work easy out of the box.

I have spent a good part of today fine tuning to get a decent image. I found the default settings to be blurry and not the quality I was wanting. Setting video encoding to 1080P @ 30 fps has resulted in an acceptable quality. It is NOT 1080P quality but the best I've come up with so far.

Here are a couple of screen shots from the browser interface. I have the cameras powered by and inverter and sitting on the dash of my truck approximately 360 ft from my AR-GL300 EXT router in a pretty much direct line of site. I have connected to this router with other devices from 450 ft and not a direct line of site. My next move is to make a stand and connect them to a 12v battery with a solar panel to keep it charged. This way I can move it around on the property as long as it stays in range.

camera1-field.jpg


camera2-field.jpg
 
   / Long range security camera #18  
Here is what I threw together to place them for now.

cameras-stand.jpg
 
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   / Long range security camera #19  
I have had similar problems and around the house I have used powerlinks (TP Link V200) but, always a but, they only work on the same circuit, they 'may' work on another circuit if you are lucky.
I tried Wifi range extenders but found they halve the speeds as they work both ways.
Finished up ripping a small trench about 6" deep and burying CAT5 in a flexible conduit.
It won't last forever but it was a cheap option and didn't take long to fix.
Used the same trench for burying low voltage cable for LED driveway lighting so we don't find tigers when we step out of the cars to open the gates at night, unfortunately where we are there are quite a few as we are close to a creek and drain and our driveway seems to attract them.
(I forget where we are, Tigers are a particularly nasty snake, Tiger Snake, very nasty venom and they blend in very well, have stepped on a few but to date not been bitten but have had some character building moments)
 

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