Problem with license plates at night is that the headlights wipe out the video.
If you have night vision or IR and are lucky enough to get the rear of the 
vehicle you may have a chance.  
Would like a solution to this issue.  

From: Lewis Bergman 
Sent: Monday, July 06, 2015 8:44 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Tower Cameras

I recently had some vandalism at my shop. I reported it and pulled the 
recordings of the several cameras I had in the area. As a result, here is what 
I learned:
1. Place a hidden camera in very close proximity to where there is a high 
likelihood of the person staring directly into it from just a few feet away. 
(My camera was 12 feet and set on a lower resolution)
2. Place a camera in a location to capture a vehicle license plate. There is no 
magic face recognition software if you don't give them somewhere to start.
3. Check them regularly. Spider webs blowing in the breeze especially at night 
when the IR is on can trigger motion recordings, eat up space on the disk, and 
make it hard to find the event when required. We had an instance where these 
guys had painted the lens of the camera and then waited a few weeks counting on 
the recording being dropped by then. That would have worked had I not noticed 
it by chance.



On Mon, Jul 6, 2015, 9:30 AM Jeremy <[email protected]> wrote:

  The DVR should work great.  I use their UniFi video software on a Windows box 
and it works well, and has a phone app.  I like it a lot better than the video 
surveillance that I am using at home.  I am planning to switch it all out for 
UniFi, and use my home server as the NVR.

  On Mon, Jul 6, 2015 at 8:27 AM, Chuck McCown <[email protected]> wrote:

    Good to know.  I just ordered the ubnt DVR so I can play with some cameras 
that I have.  
    I liked the quality of the grandstream cameras but the DVR still will not 
allow remote access so screw it.  

    From: Jeremy 
    Sent: Monday, July 06, 2015 8:24 AM
    To: [email protected] 
    Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Tower Cameras

    We have been using the gen2 UniFi cameras and have been really happy with 
them, for the price.  I am still waiting for a weatherproof version of the dome 
camera though, as the angle of view isn't quite wide enough, and they really 
only work for watching the road in.  Plus, the current dome has a strange 
mounting systme that really only works indoors for ceiling tiles.

    On Mon, Jul 6, 2015 at 6:37 AM, Paul McCall <[email protected]> wrote:

      I know this topic has been discussed here before.



      What is the best and most cost effective camera to use mounted on a 
tower?  Wondering if it is on the tower itself, how well it would see someone 
approaching.  I thought about mounting some cameras some distance away with a 
zoom at the tower box. 



      We had vandalism/theft at a remote tower over the weekend, 2nd time that 
it has happened.  This time in the middle of a Saturday afternoon.  Took 
batteries, cut power cables, etc.



      Any suggestions would be appreciated.



      Paul



      Paul McCall, Pres.

      PDMNet / Florida Broadband 

      658 Old Dixie Highway

      Vero Beach, FL 32962

      772-564-6800 office

      772-473-0352 cell

      www.pdmnet.com

      [email protected]




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