So I thought I would try camera AI again to reduce my BI CPU load. One of my Reolink cameras now throws Error for ONVIF events. The Find/Inspect comes back with this:
It no longer pulls the proper streams to populate the main/sub streams. The camera itself still does all it's things, if I leave the original main/sub streams everything works fine, it pans through it's three set view locations as it always did, but ONVIF is throwing error.
This is an identical model camera on the same system with Find/Inspect working properly:

There is a lot more if I scroll up, but the basic idea is that one camera is properly reporting ONVIF and the other isn't.
These are Reolink TrackMix POE cameras.
Am I missing something? ONVIF is still enabled, I haven't changed anything on the camera (that I remember):

This is my second Reolink that is acting abnormally, I had another lower-end 5mp model that just stopped transmitting video, the interface still works but the video just doesn't come through.
Is this the general rule of thumb "you get what you pay for" ?
I bought these with the idea that if they crapped out I could replace them cheaply, but these are malfunctioning at a rate of 1 or 2 per year out of 6 so far. Is this an expected failure rate? Should I not be buying Reolink? Or buying Reolink is fine as long as I have a couple spares of each model on hand?

It no longer pulls the proper streams to populate the main/sub streams. The camera itself still does all it's things, if I leave the original main/sub streams everything works fine, it pans through it's three set view locations as it always did, but ONVIF is throwing error.
This is an identical model camera on the same system with Find/Inspect working properly:

There is a lot more if I scroll up, but the basic idea is that one camera is properly reporting ONVIF and the other isn't.
These are Reolink TrackMix POE cameras.
Am I missing something? ONVIF is still enabled, I haven't changed anything on the camera (that I remember):

This is my second Reolink that is acting abnormally, I had another lower-end 5mp model that just stopped transmitting video, the interface still works but the video just doesn't come through.
Is this the general rule of thumb "you get what you pay for" ?
I bought these with the idea that if they crapped out I could replace them cheaply, but these are malfunctioning at a rate of 1 or 2 per year out of 6 so far. Is this an expected failure rate? Should I not be buying Reolink? Or buying Reolink is fine as long as I have a couple spares of each model on hand?
