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List Price: $99.99 Our Price: $71.99 You Save: $28.00 (28%) Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Category: Digital Camera See more product details
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Digital Cameras Photo Reviews of Q-See QSPDVR04 4 Channel Digital Video Recorder PCI CardCustomer Review: Its a good deal for the money, no doubt Summary: 4 Stars
Ok, I just picked this up recently from amazon and used it with a KPC-EX230HL camera and it works really well. Both that camera and this DVR card are better than expected. Yes, the DVR software is a bit 'basic', but not buggy ... and works out of the box and does all that is needed. It would be nice if the motion sensing logic was adjustable, but it works well and using the mpeg4 format ... the size of the recorded videos are very small ... so it record a lot a not consume so much hard disk. I'm running on only 20GB of space (older computer), but it seems like plenty. This is a lot of capability for the money, runs on slower computers and doesn't seem to load the system down much if at all. Just remember the 30fps is shared between all cameras, so if you want 30fps for all cameras, get one of these cards 'per camera'. Otherwise, just realize the 30fps is shared and you'll be happy. Please get a good camera to go with it, not the Q-See cameras or other cheapo camera. Get a .003 lux camera if you want decent low-light pictures.
Customer Review: Decent DVR, but you'll want IT/networking aptitude Summary: 4 Stars
Put 3 of these cards into two dedicated Windows XP boxes (one Home, one Pro). It takes some willingness on your part to learn - port forwarding, etc. Also, in my version of the manual, they only referenced 3 of the 4 ports that needed to be forwarded. Once you see what ports the software is trying to open, you'll see what you need to do. You can also change the ports if you like. I run two servers on the same network just by assigning different ports.
I believe you can only run the server side on XP (haven't tried anything else), but I've gotten the client side (WebCam, Remote Playback) to work on XP, Vista, and Windows 7.
Video is stored as MPEG4 based AVI files, playable in VLC and Windows Media Player. A 160 GB can hold a couple months of recordings, at least for me, when set to record only when sensing motion.
Picture quality is ok (also dependent on the camera, of course).
A good value, in my opinion.
Customer Review: PCI-E Video Recorder Card Summary: 4 Stars
This card worked good after downloading update drivers/software from the manufacture. I used this card because I used Q-See cameras, But there are other cards (Swann) that are cheaper, I could not tell you if the features are the same. They all seem to be interchangable. If your not comfortable with working with or on your computer, you might get discouraged by the time you get done, you may need to upgrade your Video card/memory. The operation software (Once you get it working) that comes with this card works pretty neat to, you can record, playback, set alarms, motion detection, e-mail notification and print out a captured picture. I run two of these cards in my computer with 8 camera, upgradeabe to 12/16 cameras with addistional PCI-E slots. One for every four cameras, flexable.
Customer Review: functional, but configuring was tricky Summary: 4 Stars
I've had this about 6 months. Before I got this system I read the reviews and now I see whats they're saying about the manual. I'm using 2 wired cameras with this and having no problems. First time configuring was trial and error. As others said, manual isnt much help because of translation. I just "Googled" and found answers. I really like how you can view an area, but you can set it up to only record when there's movement in an portion of the screen. For playback, you can manually move the playback bar to any time to view, so fast forward hasnt been an issue. a side note , I tried their wireless camera and it interfered with our wireless network.
Customer Review: Bargain DVR that works Summary: 4 Stars
I've installed many of these cards now, both for myself and for others. While you'll find many mispellings in the manual and software that isn't always that great - it really fit my needs with a budget price. The largest downside is the remote viewing software. This can take hours to get right for each computer. And then when it's right and you upgrade, you have to figure it all out again!
More Customer Reviews: ‹ 1 2 3 4 5 6 ›
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