32Ox240 Resolution –Normal resolution. This conserves drive space.

640x480 Resolution – High resolution. Records more detailed images. Requires more drive space.

Hard drive Size*
250 GB Hard Drive– Stores appx. 672 hours of normal activity from 4 cameras at normal resolution. At high resolution, it can store appx. 168 hours of normal activity from 4 cameras.

500GB Hard Drive – Stores appx. 1344 hours of normal activity from 8 or 16 cameras at normal resolution.

1 TB Hard Drive – Stores appx. 2688 hours of normal activity from 8 or 16 cameras at normal resolution.

2 TB Hard Drive - Stores appx. 5376 hours of normal activity from 8 or 16 cameras at normal resolution.

* Please note that these times will vary depending on recording resolution and the amount of activity in your facility.

After the hard drive is full, the new files will replace existing files, beginning with the oldest files. If video files must be saved, they can be copied to a CD or DVD.

Smart recording technology – If motion is detected, the DVR will record video to the hard drive at the highest frame rate possible. If there is no motion, the DVR will record a few frames every minute to save drive space.

Codec Compression – This is the standard way Windows compresses files. The saved files are not over compressed to fit limited drive space. Therefore a greater image quality is maintained. Instead of over compressing files, we add more hard drives to store data.

Wavelet,MPEG4 and M-JPEG Compression Technology – These are standard Windows recording technologies. The advantage – the video file can be played by any Microsoft Operating System worldwide. No additional software is needed.

FPS (Frames Per Second) - This is the total amount of picture frames that the DVR can capture in one second. The more fps you have, the smoother your video will look.

Hardware Watchdog – In the event of a computer hardware or software lockup, the watchdog feature is capable of rebooting the DVR to correct the problem.

Digital Water Mark – This feature imprints an invisible watermark on the video .This mark ensures that the video is original and has not been tampered with.

Thumbnail video playback - Divides the viewing screen so that up to 16 cameras can be played back all at once.

Raid 5 (Fault Tolerant) – The DVR spreads information out over multiple hard drives. In the event that one hard drive fails, the other hard drives have enough information to rebuild the information lost on the failed hard drive. No information will be lost.

Mirrored Operating System (Raid 1) – Two separate hard drives are loaded with the same operating system. In the event that one of the drives fail, the other will continue to run the DVR.

Four Level Password protection - This allows or disallows access to four different areas of the DVR program.