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Alarm: Motion Detection Notes
Advanced Configuration
Motion Detection Compatibility
You’ll be able to use the DVR’s motion detection with almost all static, wired cameras.
PTZ systems are fundamentally incompatible with motion detection. Avoid enabling motion detection on a channel which has a PTZ system attached to it - especially when the PTZ system is set to Cruise Mode.
Wireless cameras are not recommended for use with the motion detection - the visual distortion and dropped frames caused by wireless transmission of video data give numerous false triggers.
False Triggers
Setting the motion detection at high sensitivity levels (4 or lower) increases the frequency of false alarms. On the other hand, low sensitivity levels (20 or higher) increase the risk that a significant motion event (such as an intruder) will not trigger the motion detection to record.
Check the Motion Detection settings both during the day and at night. In
Image Sensors: CMOS and CCD
There are two kinds of CCTV cameras out there: CMOS and CCD. Neither technology is inherently “better” but they’re quite different and you may need to adjust your motion detection sensitivity to suit the kind of cameras you have.
CCD: A
CMOS: A Complementary
Weather
The weather conditions are going to affect your motion detection. Dramatic weather phenomenon such as heavy rain, strong winds, lightning and so on, may trigger the motion detection with surprising frequency.
On the other hand, things like fog, mist and other obscuring kinds of weather might mask or obscure something moving to the point that the DVR fails to detect them.
Here are a few steps you can take to minimize the amount of noise in your images.
•Try adjusting the Image Settings (see “Display: Camera” on page 28 for details) to
•Limit the motion sensitive area to only the areas in view that a target could be. In particular, large featureless areas in the camera’s view are the ones most likely to give false triggers - turning off the motion sensitivity to any area a target cannot move in front of will help reduce false triggers.
Note: The motion detection feature will seem more sensitive at night, particularly when using
Some tips to customizing your motion detection
sensitivity and actions:
• Consider how important it is to be notified of motion events as they happen.
Using the email alerts is a great way to be kept
•It can be important to have a complete record of a subject’s movements and actions for legal reasons.
If your cameras capture an illegal event (typically an intruder, but we’re continually surprised by stories from our users) it is important to have as much information as possible.
For example, images of someone in your home may not actually prove that they broke in - but footage of them breaking a window does. If you use a camera inside the home to trigger all exterior cameras with
•Always consider what’s really important.
Which is the bigger problem - a dozen false triggers per day, or missing one critical event?
There’s no magic setting which will make motion detection work perfectly. There will always be some events that it’s not sensitive enough to catch, or minor happenings that will trigger an overly sensitive camera to record. Typically, the best motion detection settings are one’s that give few false triggers but don’t miss anything.
Even motion detection which false triggers a few times per hour will still save a significant amount of hard drive space compared with a constant recording schedule for the same duration.
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