
All of the Ubiquiti Cameras - I am talking about specifically, because you cannot adjust the shutter speed which is critical for night-time surveillance.Which Ubiquiti camera are yo talking about specifically?
I have a couple G5’s and also experienced some ghosting on a night shot of a fox. I’m going to swap them out for some G6’s this year cause I have nothing better to do with my time and money apparently, lol
If I could afford the G6 pro’s I’d probably switch over as the protect ai is pretty darn good and interface and alert system
If pretty easy to se up. Not to mention I already have all UniFi equipment.
I tried different setting even the prioritize nightime and it still didn’t get the results I had hoped for. We’ll see how the g6 compares this summer. Didn’t you also have the AI Port? Any luck with it?All of the Ubiquiti Cameras - I am talking about specifically, because you cannot adjust the shutter speed which is critical for night-time surveillance.
Ubiquiti only offers "3" Presets for Shutter control - it is absurd - and I have tested this on my G5 and G6 Turrets
I still want to purchase a G6 Pro Turret at some point, but am waiting for when and IF Ubiquiti ever allows us to control shutter speed, you can the OP as to what I am referring to
The G6 Turret did equally poor alongside my G5 Turret at night. Ubiquiti needs to seriously allow us to configure shutter speed, then we are in business. These Ubiquiti cameras are good for near subject identification but not for distant subjects. Andy's 5442 cameras takes over in this department being able to capture details in the dark up to 30-40 feet away without hesitancy.I tried different setting even the prioritize nightime and it still didn’t get the results I had hoped for. We’ll see how the g6 compares this summer. Didn’t you also have the AI Port? Any luck with it?