Re: wildlife cameras bushnell trail sentry



I wonder if you can tell me How to over ride the password. Somehow in
the process of going through the setup (which is always confussing
every time I use this thing) I guess I changed the default password by
mistake. Now I can't access my camera.
Thanks
HarryHydro wrote:
Hi Folks:
I've had the pleasure to look at a couple of cameras to use for a
security project. This one is the Bushnell Trail Sentry. This unit
takes 4 D batteries and comes with no memory. You need a SD chip to
store media on.
After going through the setup to set the time and date, I first
went into video mode which records AVI's. The dates in the files
directory were wrong. After turning it off and on again, although I
still had the movie-camera icon, the camera was in its lower-resolution
(640X480) picture mode. It took a picture, to my suprise. Once
viewing the chip again, the time stamps were correct in the directory.
In the picture, the time stamps are in the lower right, and look very
sharp!
Some nuiances: Everytime the camera is powered on, dispite
appearing like it's in the movie mode with the icons, it's really in
the picture mode. I have to go through the menu and reselect the movie
mode. Also, the website and manual both seem to call this flash
incandescent. I assure you it looks like xenon to me. The energy is
intense and it even clicks (softly) with the discharge.
This camera seems to have a very sensitive imaging chip. Taking
pictures in the room, even with a wall 15 feet away, with flash, leaves
the pictures almost all white. In movie mode, the flash doesn't
activate, of course. Even in movie mode, this camera is pretty
sensitive. If it's bright, however, it takes movies at a higher frame
rate (14fps)! It slows down when it's dark, but it can't change rates
once it's started taking movies. If it was dark when the images
started, it slows down to about 1.4fps. If it gets light whithin the
'take', the images just comes out all white. The opposite is true if
it starts light at 14fps and gets a bit dark. The rest is black. This
should be no issue in real-life outside imaging where is gets dark and
light slowly anyway. Note: Clips are about 15 seconds long.
This is one fast trigger in picture mode! Max delay is about a
second. It seems after the first picture, the trigger is even quicker!
This should be great at capturing running animals! Sharpness is about
normal. The PIR is considerably narrower than the field-of-view.

Soon I'll post some pictures on my website,
http://www.harryhydro.com/wildlife/

Harry

.



Relevant Pages

  • wildlife cameras bushnell trail sentry
    ... It took a picture, to my suprise. ... Everytime the camera is powered on, ... In movie mode, the flash doesn't ... It slows down when it's dark, ...
    (rec.photo.equipment.misc)
  • Re: how to deal with "delay time" when photographing
    ... "the length of time between my pushing the button, and the camera ... taking the picture." ... as is using the movie mode if capturing the action is ...
    (rec.photo.digital)
  • Re: Megapixels
    ... > I'm currently shooting on an N75 with my array of lenses (all Nikon mind ... > lenses run roughly for $900 on from bnh). ... On the camera lets say the D70s, the LCD is only 2 inches square about. ... It's very hard to see any detail of the picture using a small screen like ...
    (rec.photo.digital)
  • Re: Sen. Barack Obama:
    ... camera bodies if I buy another camera. ... print photos and am amazed at how well most of them turn out, ... I want to be able to magnify small parts of the picture, and when I do with 5 ... Top line video processing software, will handle still shots, almost as well as standalone still processing software. ...
    (misc.news.internet.discuss)
  • Re: Request for camera advice
    ... In the picture you linked to above, ... that if your camera is autofocusing, ... and that the ones in SLRs are better than those in compacts. ... full 35mm sensors, but these are aimed more at professionals. ...
    (uk.railway)