Finally, someone who offers some real world info on trail cameras. Too many guys show the unboxing and then reads you the specs on the back of a box, which I can get myself from the manufacturer's website. Please continue these in depth reviews as this is exactly what I was looking for and i am sure others as well. i bought some of the tascos today and I'm thinking of taking them back and trying out the spypoint micro link.
I thought low glow and red glow were pretty much the same, just different terms, like how no glow and black flash are the same thing, just different terminology. I've never had any cams spook the game, not even my old white flash cams. coyote will jump sometimes, but they come right back. deer usually come right to the cam to check it out with the low glows. low glows used to be better with illumination at night, being that they aren't as diffused. no glows are best for keeping themselves concealed and not giving away their location, especially to other people.
Nice video👍which trail camera you'll recommend for use at night that is not recognizable to human in both photo and video mode. Also one that can give me 8 hours run time
I'm real curious, and you would be the person to know. if a "creature" could see UV / IR light or whatever lasers the motion sensors are in a trail cam, what are they seeing? is it like a scene from mission impossible crossing a laser field?
Red glow and low glow terms are interchangeable. You can see no glow with your cellphone camera by looking directly at the LEDs. Some people do not like the noglow cameras thinking that there is less light. This is a function of the sensitivity of the camera chip, CMOS chips are cheaper and are getting better. The Standard used to be the CCD chips which had different sensitivity. White light cameras are mostly used as wildlife camera traps. It is amazing how the white light does not spook some animals. You can see this with your motion-detecting lights around your home. The cameras have come a long way in the last few years. You can get a $50 camera that is just as good as the ones that sold for $600 a few years ago. Find an honest reviewer. Nearly all get free cameras for a good review. The latest fad seems to be trigger speed. Most are bunk thinking turning on the LEDs is the goal. The processor buffer determines when a recording starts. Often video recording starts 10 x later than photos. The advertised trigger speed is for photos. Megapixel is something to take with a grain of salt. Some will tell you in the instructions that anything over 1080p may be an interpolation of the pixels.
Finally, someone who offers some real world info on trail cameras. Too many guys show the unboxing and then reads you the specs on the back of a box, which I can get myself from the manufacturer's website. Please continue these in depth reviews as this is exactly what I was looking for and i am sure others as well. i bought some of the tascos today and I'm thinking of taking them back and trying out the spypoint micro link.
Agree with you
i guess Im kinda off topic but does anybody know a good place to stream new series online ?
@Cain Connor Lately I have been using FlixZone. Just google for it :)
I didn't think I would learn anything here .. but I did, more than I thought, great video.!
This has been SUPER helpful. Thank you so much.
I really appreciate the time put into this
Thanka for this educational, straight forward video
What would you suggest for me to buy in the no glow trail cameras ??? Short video would also help me out for security of my garage. Thanks
Great video. The second camera definitely was brighter.
I just took my dark ops out of the woods, first time trying one and it’s incredible. I only had animals no false triggers.
Good information thanks
Good video
great video buddy!
Thank you! Might do two more on trail cameras.
I thought low glow and red glow were pretty much the same, just different terms, like how no glow and black flash are the same thing, just different terminology.
I've never had any cams spook the game, not even my old white flash cams. coyote will jump sometimes, but they come right back. deer usually come right to the cam to check it out with the low glows.
low glows used to be better with illumination at night, being that they aren't as diffused. no glows are best for keeping themselves concealed and not giving away their location, especially to other people.
Thank you you are the video i was looking for 🙏👌
Good video 👍
Thank you!
Thanks you so much for this video. It will really save me a lot of money. Godbless.
Nice video👍which trail camera you'll recommend for use at night that is not recognizable to human in both photo and video mode. Also one that can give me 8 hours run time
was you camcorder able to see the 940nm ir light beam from the browning?
Thank you so much
What are the advantages compared with security cameras (e.g. Argus 2, Reolink Go, ...)?
3:26....How do you fix a video game camera , that blinds out ,and only shows bright light when triggered ?
So all these cameras put out light at night right
So the no glow have no light but blurry pictures?
I'm real curious, and you would be the person to know. if a "creature" could see UV / IR light or whatever lasers the motion sensors are in a trail cam, what are they seeing? is it like a scene from mission impossible crossing a laser field?
Red glow and low glow terms are interchangeable. You can see no glow with your cellphone camera by looking directly at the LEDs. Some people do not like the noglow cameras thinking that there is less light. This is a function of the sensitivity of the camera chip, CMOS chips are cheaper and are getting better. The Standard used to be the CCD chips which had different sensitivity. White light cameras are mostly used as wildlife camera traps. It is amazing how the white light does not spook some animals. You can see this with your motion-detecting lights around your home. The cameras have come a long way in the last few years. You can get a $50 camera that is just as good as the ones that sold for $600 a few years ago. Find an honest reviewer. Nearly all get free cameras for a good review. The latest fad seems to be trigger speed. Most are bunk thinking turning on the LEDs is the goal. The processor buffer determines when a recording starts. Often video recording starts 10 x later than photos. The advertised trigger speed is for photos. Megapixel is something to take with a grain of salt. Some will tell you in the instructions that anything over 1080p may be an interpolation of the pixels.
what i learned today is if you are getting pictures or video during the day they are ok.... but for night shots a big blur ....
Can you recommend a camera for security on a logging road? No glow with cellular reception? I can't find anything around the $250 mark.
I'm not aware of a suggestion for you but if you call this number they will know for sure. 1-800-791-0660
@@MasterPredatorHuntingcom what's the number for? Is it a security company?
is there a way to minimize the glare on a trail cam?
What do you mean?
Wow, all 3 cameras have horrible pictures, fuzzy, out of focus, blurry and wobbly results, not worth the price !
Trigger speeds were God awful.
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