Recording Time Table
(Per 160GB of storage with the installation of 4 cameras.)
Standard
NTSC
Quality | 60fps |
Highest | 62 |
High | 88 |
Normal | 107 |
|
|
Lower | 120 |
48fps | 32fps | 16fps |
78 | 116 | 232 |
110 | 165 | 330 |
134 | 201 | 401 |
|
|
|
150 | 225 | 450 |
Unit: Hour 1fps 3720 5280 6420 7200
Standard
PAL
Quality
Highest
High
Normal
Lower
50fps | 36fps |
64 | 89 |
90125
110 153
123 171
24fps
133
188
229
256
12fps
267
375
458
513
1fps
3200
4500
5500
6150
The figures in the table above were estimated under ideal recording conditions and may vary from your actual recording situation.
In the table above, multiply by 2 for recording hours with an 320 GB HDD and 3 for recording hours with a 500 GB HDD.
The complexity of the image and the amount of motion recorded greatly influences the recording capacity of your hard drive (HDD). The higher the frames per second and the higher the video quality setting, the lower your HDD recording capacity will be. In the same manner, the lower the frames per second setting and the lower the video quality setting, the higher your HDD recording capacity will be.
Note that the lower frame rate does not mean a lower video quality. The video quality remains the same whether the frames per second setting is set high or low. One frame per second is the same as taking a photo every second.
NTSC:Max.60 fps, PAL:Max.50 fps