How do I determine what focal length my Ubiquiti G6 Turret is? Its not published on Ubiquiti's website
Field of View
H: 109.9°, V: 56.7°, D: 134.1°
Many cameras × many focal lengths × fixed viewpoints
Fewer cameras × higher resolution × wider lenses + targeted long-lens coverage where needed
Just to confirm, 2.8mm, right?Classic 28mm
Ubiquity don’t do 36mm or anything other than
Yes 2.8mmJust to confirm, 2.8mm, right?
This seems to an important point that Ubiquiti users over at Reddit are failing to realizeYes 2.8mm
In case of cctv cams this is only marketing virtual specification, which means wide zoom (105-110 degree horizontal). Used for comparison between models.
In reality focus length is different. And very depended of sensor size.
Multiple focal lengths were super important with old analog cameras which had low resolution. As resolutions increase it's just not worth trying to get the perfect zoomed in focal length.
I notice non-Dahua and non-Hikvision cameras come with a standard wide angle lenses lacking various focal lengths for purchased fixed lens cameras
What is you take on this?
Cameras in general, Objects indeed go out of focus rapidly when approaching a camera lens at close distances because the depth of field (the range of acceptable focus) shrinks dramatically, especially with wider apertures or longer focal lengths. As the subject gets closer, the image moves further behind the lens/sensor, making it difficult to maintain sharp focus. It seems Ubiquiti wants to argue with the fact that their 2.8mm focal length is pretty standard and that objects will not go out of focus easily as it gets closer to the camera lens.That quote is really more opinion than fact.
It is a fact that a "4K" camera has at least 20x more pixels than a typical old analog camera. It is an opinion that having all those pixels makes longer focal lengths worthless. It has been shown many, many times on this forum how longer focal lengths still hugely outperform wide views.
I've been saying for years they should make an IP cam with a very high resolution sensor and good lens like you would find in a $300-$1000 handheld camera. Or a DSLR like a professional photographer would use. Doesn't matter if they can't do the sensor justice will full motion video. Because they can use a lower res sensor and fixed wide lens for video and for triggering the big boy to take zoomed in very crisp photos. Imagine if every AI confirmed trigger came with 32 megapixel jpegs that look like you had someone standing on your porch with a zoom lens. They could even throw in a high powered flash (light) so it can take sharp pictures of moving things at night. I am sure it would be expensive as hell because of the unusual engineering involved and relatively small market who can afford it. But there are people willing to pay crazy amounts for high end cams. There would be a market for this. Maybe they are already making these and I just don't know about them because the price is too high.
I've been following the remarks from Ubiquiti users on Reddit lately:CCTV cameras are a very low-cost product. This is partly due to the OEM <> distributors <> installers <> end-user model. Dahua China, for example, sells the 5442-s3 (which is costly profesional model) for around $100, and Andy's store sells them for around $200, while in the standard Dahua full-service model, the MSR for them is $600.
This low cost means the cameras use cheap components – sensors, processors, lenses, etc. In a sense, they are manufactured using cheap old scrap from other industries (e.g., mobile phones).
The development of sensors for CCTV cameras has stagnated for several years. We don't see any progress here from 2022-2023.
Looking at where the money is being invested in development (smartphones, action cameras, drones) and the development of optical sensors for them, the only path forward for CCTV cameras is to adopt solutions designed for smartphones...
32 (16:9) / 48 (3:2) Mpx sensors using quad Bayer technology have monopolized the smartphone/action camera and drone market. Technological progress here is very high...
During the day, they can operate at high resolution (8K), and at night, they can group 4 pixels per 1 (for higher sensitivity) and operate at 4K resolution with better night performance.
this should solve also problems with low DORI for fixed lens cameras (8K vs 4K or 4MPX)...
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But lets not categorize expensive offerings from Axis to be equivalent to a RED camera; same with Ubiquiti's G6 Pro Turret which is astronomically pricedAI contradicting itself. Security doesn't care about look, just ....evidence quality. Evidence quality is dependent on look!!
It's a misconception for this reason that quality doesn't matter and find me someone who wouldn't like a CCTV picture that looks like it's been shot on a RED camera.
The real reason quality is lower is because of an increasingly outdated notion of storage being unaffordable for high resolutlion, high bit rate footage. However, with modern compression and cheap storage (maybe an issue now for solid state once again with memory pricing), there's no need to worry as much about storage needs.
I've been following the remarks from Ubiquiti users on Reddit lately:
- One user flagged that DORI values are insignificant to the CCTV world now due to 4K sensors being featured in high-end Ubiquiti models like the G6 Pro Turret
- One user states that Dahua cameras are by no means "professional"
- Another user also stated that focal lengths are no longer need to be considered due to the 4K sensors with 1/1.2" sensors that perform well 24/7 and has plenty of pixels to zoom into on any part of the frame
The way companies like Apple and Samsung put multiple cameras on the rear of their phones could be the way forward with newer IP cameras in the future as @steve1225 stated with Bayer technology
Higher resolution certainly make it easier to get high ppm for identification purposes, but we all know that it also comes at the cost of worse low/no light performance. So while I don't think you always need a variable focus lens over a fixed focus lens just to be able to dial in the last Nth degree of coverage, it is obviously still important to choose the proper fixed focal length camera for the job. In other words, don't pick a 2.8mm camera when you really need a 6mm camera, but choosing a 6mm fixed focal length camera when you could really dial it to 6.5854mm with a variable focal length camera is fine. Also, keep in mind that all things being equal, fixed focal length cameras are going to have a better image quality because the extra lenses needed to create a variable focal length camera will reduce the quality of the image somewhat.View attachment 237790
I notice non-Dahua and non-Hikvision cameras come with a standard wide angle lenses lacking various focal lengths for purchased fixed lens cameras
What is you take on this?
- Another user also stated that focal lengths are no longer need to be considered due to the 4K sensors with 1/1.2" sensors that perform well 24/7 and has plenty of pixels to zoom into on any part of the frame

Spot-OnHigher resolution certainly make it easier to get high ppm for identification purposes, but we all know that it also comes at the cost of worse low/no light performance. So while I don't think you always need a variable focus lens over a fixed focus lens just to be able to dial in the last Nth degree of coverage, it is obviously still important to choose the proper fixed focal length camera for the job. In other words, don't pick a 2.8mm camera when you really need a 6mm camera, but choosing a 6mm fixed focal length camera when you could really dial it to 6.5854mm with a variable focal length camera is fine. Also, keep in mind that all things being equal, fixed focal length cameras are going to have a better image quality because the extra lenses needed to create a variable focal length camera will reduce the quality of the image somewhat.
Long story short, it is just as important as ever to research and design the overall project correctly. During this design phase, you may find that there are lots of locations where fixed focal length cameras will work fine. You may also find locations where there simply isn't a fixed focal length camera that meets the design needs and therefore a variable focal length camera is the correct choice. All things being equal however, I would rather have a fixed focal length camera than a variable focal length camera set at or near one of the common fixed focal length options due to the better image quality of the fixed focal length cameras.
I also don't buy that argument. It's great that we are seeing 4k sensors with 1/1.2" sensors. That combination will certainly provide better low/no light performance than other 4k cameras with smaller sensors. But it's not like we have achieved the "end all be all" when it comes to low/no light performance. All things being equal, I'd still rather have a 2k (or lower resolution) sensor that's 1/1.2" in size. Getting a extra stop or two of exposure could absolutely be the difference between a footage that is sharp enough for identification and footage that has just enough motion blurring to render it useless for identification purposes.
Long story short, people making those kinds of statements really have no idea how the physics of all of this works.....
PS - the people that make statements like that are also the same people that pay top dollar for fast internet service (over 1000/1000) because their family of 4 likes to stream different Netflix shows at the same time....![]()