Yep LOL.
I have that camera
@bigredfish mentioned. It works well in a truly backlit condition, but it isn't going to be as crisp as a comparable single lens only sees infrared or white light camera.
Just keep in mind that the 180 and 4K/T do not see infrared, so if you do not have enough white light or do not want to use the built-in white LED, then it is the wrong camera choice.
Further, many are seeing that the larger 1/1.2" sensor cameras have a VERY shallow focus depth and anything short or long of that distance will be blurry. You can really tell they are not infinity focus.
If your IDENTIFY distance isn't about 18 feet, then it isn't the right camera for you unless it is for overview purposes.
As such many are using them solely as OVERVIEW cameras to compliment their existing cameras by providing color due to such little light needed.
No need to chase MP.
Optical zoom beats digital zoom ALL NIGHT LONG and usually ALL DAY LONG.
I will take a 2MP camera that has optical zoom capabilities to IDENTIFY at 95 feet than a 8MP 2.8mm fixed lens camera trying to IDENTIFY at 95 feet all day and all night.
That is also a big misconception people have is that the higher MP means you can digital zoom. Not really as these sensor are still small. You might get away with a little bit during the day, but not at night.
At the urging of several folks here, I created a thread to show the importance of focal length and how focal length can be more important than megapixels (MP). I mentioned some of this in the post regarding The Hookup’s latest video demonstrating different cameras, including one sold from a...
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