Hi friends. Before purchasing several of these EyeSurv cameras, I started with just one, just to see how it worked with Bluecherry (my NVR software) and how it in general worked. I was comparing the feeds of my Vivotek vs that of the EyeSurv I installed today. In both of these pictures, all camera settings are running stock settings, both using H264, both running with the same exterior lighting, etc. I was pretty happy with the results.


Initially I was a little spooked by the EyeSurv. Clearly I read the manual too fast, and picked the substream1 that I saw listed first. The quality was... meh. Then I realized the substream1 is the actual sub stream, while substream0 is the real 3mp main stream. Once I flipped that URL over in Bluecherry it was far better.
It's a bit late tonight to further tinker with the settings, but I'm sure I'll get to configuring the profiles this week. Best I got was date/time/ntp set up and set it to record with the NVR.
I think the only question I have that I didn't figure out yet is whether or not there's a "focus" on this camera. With my Vivoteks, I could pull the guts of the camera out of the bullet housing and twist the lens to focus it (which came in handy since when I got it years ago, it was a bit blurry). Typically do cameras with a "fixed" lens have the ability to still adjust the focus? Or does a fixed lens truly mean 100% fixed, zero adjustment? (compared to my original assumption that fixed meant it doesn't zoom in/out but still provides focal adjustment) I didn't think to try it when I was wiring things up, and my back is telling me I need to stay in couch mode for a bit.
Initial impressions though (based entirely on night mode... gotta wait until tomorrow for day mode)... I'm a happy camper, and a bit more amped up to order a few more EyeSurv cameras and throw them in the mix.
P.S. - For those curious about the placement, this particular camera is meant to be a "general purpose record everything in the car port/deck area" camera. The upcoming cameras will be better placed for driveway/rear door shots.


Initially I was a little spooked by the EyeSurv. Clearly I read the manual too fast, and picked the substream1 that I saw listed first. The quality was... meh. Then I realized the substream1 is the actual sub stream, while substream0 is the real 3mp main stream. Once I flipped that URL over in Bluecherry it was far better.
It's a bit late tonight to further tinker with the settings, but I'm sure I'll get to configuring the profiles this week. Best I got was date/time/ntp set up and set it to record with the NVR.
I think the only question I have that I didn't figure out yet is whether or not there's a "focus" on this camera. With my Vivoteks, I could pull the guts of the camera out of the bullet housing and twist the lens to focus it (which came in handy since when I got it years ago, it was a bit blurry). Typically do cameras with a "fixed" lens have the ability to still adjust the focus? Or does a fixed lens truly mean 100% fixed, zero adjustment? (compared to my original assumption that fixed meant it doesn't zoom in/out but still provides focal adjustment) I didn't think to try it when I was wiring things up, and my back is telling me I need to stay in couch mode for a bit.
Initial impressions though (based entirely on night mode... gotta wait until tomorrow for day mode)... I'm a happy camper, and a bit more amped up to order a few more EyeSurv cameras and throw them in the mix.
P.S. - For those curious about the placement, this particular camera is meant to be a "general purpose record everything in the car port/deck area" camera. The upcoming cameras will be better placed for driveway/rear door shots.