I've operated a Lorex LNR616X-N 4K 16-Channel NVR around the perimeter of my house for a few years now. It only came with four fixed position (not PTZ) cameras. I have cameras positioned where my back yard abuts a large park and I have cameras in the trees around the front of my house that point down the street in both directions. The purpose has been to catch people who have been breaking into cars and vandalizing property in our neighborhood. Three successful felony convictions so far!!!
I'd like to add some additional cameras, but I'm not sure what cameras might be compatible and what the capabilities of said options might be. For example, am I stuck with Lorex branded cameras, or can I use other brands?
The user manual states that only Lorex PTZ cameras are compatible for PTZ functionality. Is this likely true, or are they just trying to make more money for themselves?
Also, I've never used PTZ cameras, (as the cameras included are fixed). Is there a great benefit to PTZ, or in practice is it better to just buy several fixed position cameras to cover an area?
And what about fixed (Non-PTZ0 cameras - Can off-brands be used?
I've noticed that while the video resolution might be 4K, the actual video quality kinda sucks. Is that mostly do to the actual cameras being used, or is that more to do with how the video is being encoded/compressed?
Thank you in advance for the assistance!
I'd like to add some additional cameras, but I'm not sure what cameras might be compatible and what the capabilities of said options might be. For example, am I stuck with Lorex branded cameras, or can I use other brands?
The user manual states that only Lorex PTZ cameras are compatible for PTZ functionality. Is this likely true, or are they just trying to make more money for themselves?
Also, I've never used PTZ cameras, (as the cameras included are fixed). Is there a great benefit to PTZ, or in practice is it better to just buy several fixed position cameras to cover an area?
And what about fixed (Non-PTZ0 cameras - Can off-brands be used?
I've noticed that while the video resolution might be 4K, the actual video quality kinda sucks. Is that mostly do to the actual cameras being used, or is that more to do with how the video is being encoded/compressed?
Thank you in advance for the assistance!