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We have not had much hands-on experience with the latest 8MP G2 AcuSense cameras, but just today we have been testing a camera that was returned to us by a customer and when analysing the cameras video settings and stream output we noticed big bitrate spikes from both a 2386G2 and an older 2385FWD with very similar settings.
Our older 2385FWD was using around 6,000-8,000Kbps with no activity in the scene and this jumped to around 13,000-15,000Kbps with medium activity in the scene (one person walking around the scene). With the 2386G2 the no activity bitrate was 5,000-8,000Kbps and with medium activity it jumped massively to between 13,000-20,000Kbps
Both cameras were the same settings (8MP/15fps/variable bitrate/highest quality/H.265) and from some tweaking of settings, we found the setting that appears to have the biggest effect on bitrate is the video quality. When we dropped this from Highest to Higher the idle bit rate of the 2385FWD dropped to around 2,000Kbps and on the 2386G2 it also dropped to around 2,000.
Obviously, using H.265+ will reduce the bitrate when using Highest video quality but for those using certain Smart Events and/or recording via a 3rd-party software they won’t have the option to use H.265+ and so for those users we would definitely recommend using H.265 & Higher video quality to reduce the spiking bitrate without a massive loss in video quality. (from our testing the quality drop is only slightly noticeable on faces/objects that are very close to the camera - 1-2m away - but this drop is not so much that you could not still identify important details)
This spiking bitrate may explain some of the cases that customers and forum users have reported to us where one or multiple cameras are not showing up on the NVR. If you take a 7608NI-I2 NVR as an example that has a max. incoming bandwidth of 80Mbps and so 4 x 2386G2 cameras set to the highest quality on H.265 are each going to be using around 20Mbps (20,000Kbps) to capture medium level activity and that is already all the bandwidth capacity of an 8-channel NVR exhausted for only 4 cameras.
Our older 2385FWD was using around 6,000-8,000Kbps with no activity in the scene and this jumped to around 13,000-15,000Kbps with medium activity in the scene (one person walking around the scene). With the 2386G2 the no activity bitrate was 5,000-8,000Kbps and with medium activity it jumped massively to between 13,000-20,000Kbps
Both cameras were the same settings (8MP/15fps/variable bitrate/highest quality/H.265) and from some tweaking of settings, we found the setting that appears to have the biggest effect on bitrate is the video quality. When we dropped this from Highest to Higher the idle bit rate of the 2385FWD dropped to around 2,000Kbps and on the 2386G2 it also dropped to around 2,000.
Obviously, using H.265+ will reduce the bitrate when using Highest video quality but for those using certain Smart Events and/or recording via a 3rd-party software they won’t have the option to use H.265+ and so for those users we would definitely recommend using H.265 & Higher video quality to reduce the spiking bitrate without a massive loss in video quality. (from our testing the quality drop is only slightly noticeable on faces/objects that are very close to the camera - 1-2m away - but this drop is not so much that you could not still identify important details)
This spiking bitrate may explain some of the cases that customers and forum users have reported to us where one or multiple cameras are not showing up on the NVR. If you take a 7608NI-I2 NVR as an example that has a max. incoming bandwidth of 80Mbps and so 4 x 2386G2 cameras set to the highest quality on H.265 are each going to be using around 20Mbps (20,000Kbps) to capture medium level activity and that is already all the bandwidth capacity of an 8-channel NVR exhausted for only 4 cameras.