no not even close to twice as muchDoes a Hik 4Mp camera give twice as much zoom than a Hik 2Mp camera on a 1080p monitor before the picture starts to blur?
Excellent postI would think that the amount of zoom without losing quality would be the square root of the ratio of the pixel counts. To achieve a no quality loss 2x zoom, you need twice as many pixels in both the horizontal and vertical directions, or 4 times as many pixels. Comparing a 4 MP camera to a 2 MP camera, the ratio of the pixel count is 2, so the maximum zoom with no quality loss would be the square root of 2, approximately 1.4. In general the benefit of a 4 MP camera over 2 MP is a clearer daytime image at the expense of a poorer night image and increased storage space. As with many other things, if money is no object you can spend a lot of it on a high megapixel camera with a big sensor that will give decent night sensitivity.
I would think that the amount of zoom without losing quality would be the square root of the ratio of the pixel counts. To achieve a no quality loss 2x zoom, you need twice as many pixels in both the horizontal and vertical directions, or 4 times as many pixels. Comparing a 4 MP camera to a 2 MP camera, the ratio of the pixel count is 2, so the maximum zoom with no quality loss would be the square root of 2, approximately 1.4. In general the benefit of a 4 MP camera over 2 MP is a clearer daytime image at the expense of a poorer night image and increased storage space. As with many other things, if money is no object you can spend a lot of it on a high megapixel camera with a big sensor that will give decent night sensitivity.
I would think that the amount of zoom without losing quality would be the square root of the ratio of the pixel counts. To achieve a no quality loss 2x zoom, you need twice as many pixels in both the horizontal and vertical directions, or 4 times as many pixels. Comparing a 4 MP camera to a 2 MP camera, the ratio of the pixel count is 2, so the maximum zoom with no quality loss would be the square root of 2, approximately 1.4. In general the benefit of a 4 MP camera over 2 MP is a clearer daytime image at the expense of a poorer night image and increased storage space. As with many other things, if money is no object you can spend a lot of it on a high megapixel camera with a big sensor that will give decent night sensitivity.
... However, I know in a year or two I might get the bug to look for an upgrade. Kinda dread going to a larger camera though. cheers.
i'm comparing older Box cameras online and noticed that a model with 2MP, 4Mp and 8MP all have a max. bitrate of 16Megabit/s while all use a 1/1.8" sensor. (I'm talking about 2CD7026G0, 2CD7046G0 and 2CD7086G0)
I don't understand the benefit of a higher resolution when the bitrate keeps being the same. We're talking 2Megabytes per second, which should be totally fine for 1080p but the same for 4K i am questioning the benefit.
Does anyone have experience with that?
I know lowlight performance decreases with higher pixel counts so there's another reason that higher MP products don't give you that much more quality.