When you look at the technical specifications for these two models, they are identical.
Sensor1/1.8 , Min. IlluminationColor: 0.0005 Lux,@ (F1.0, AGC ON),0 Lux with light .
Do these two models differ only in appearance and installation method ?
When you look at the technical specifications for these two models, they are identical.
Sensor1/1.8 , Min. IlluminationColor: 0.0005 Lux,@ (F1.0, AGC ON),0 Lux with light .
Do these two models differ only in appearance and installation method ?
Yes - 2387 is a turret, 2087 is a bullet, 2187 is a dome. All of the fixed lens models use the same sensor and mostly have the same specs. The 2087 claims 40m maximum illumination distance whereas the bullet and turret claim 30m (that's the case with other models as well historically)
Yes - 2387 is a turret, 2087 is a bullet, 2187 is a dome. All of the fixed lens models use the same sensor and mostly have the same specs. The 2087 claims 40m maximum illumination distance whereas the bullet and turret claim 30m (that's the case with other models as well historically)
I envy your intelligence. I'll explain what I was asking. A friend of mine has a 2047G2-L, and the illuminator seems to shine more sideways. I have a 2347G2-L, and the illuminator shines strongly in one spot. If the cameras differ in illuminator at 10 meters, is there a difference in the dispersion of that light, or will the ghosting effect be less visible at 20 meters when comparing the cameras? I'm looking for a realistic comparison, not the manufacturer's "paper will accept anything" data.
To tell exact difference one would need to mount both cameras on same scene 1 after another and not in same time. And see the difference itself or use an actual lux sensor to detect how much it shines.
Those cameras dont worth the test itself, as installing preparing and testing exceeds the amount of money compared to cameras. If you believe it does, do us a favour and do the test yourself and let us know.
Sorry my answered triggered you, it wasn't my intention.
To tell exact difference one would need to mount both cameras on same scene 1 after another and not in same time. And see the difference itself or use an actual lux sensor to detect how much it shines.
Those cameras dont worth the test itself, as installing preparing and testing exceeds the amount of money compared to cameras. If you believe it does, do us a favour and do the test yourself and let us know.
Sorry my answered triggered you, it wasn't my intention.