![]() I like my 96 Chevy truck because I can work on it easily. That is just my opinion.īut I guess these principles are true in all markets. So I hear your opinion, and I assume you have had a bad experience with it in the past, but from the 6-7 Reolink NVR setups I have installed in the past couple of years, I haven't had any trouble, and people don't call me back with issues. That matters to me, but doesn't even cross the mind of most people. The Dahua NVR does have some features the Reolink doesn't have, like timed screenshots for an easy time-lapse compilation. I like Dahuas 2.8mm cameras for the same price, so that's what I have for several of them at my house. 4.0mm on the standard camera is too narrow for me. The one thing I don't like about Reolinks cameras is the angle of the lenses. I did have one wireless camera give me trouble so I returned it. I haven't had any faulty hard-wired cameras. I think the best setup I have found to buy and put in a house for someone like my parents (average end-users) is a Reolink setup. Of course I disregard the analog garbage people buy at Sam's all together. The apps are difficult and adding another camera is clunky at best. I have tried a Dahua setup twice and it requires much more technical knowledge to manipulate than most people can handle. I have setup 15+ camera setups for other people. I have a Dahua NVR at my house with several different brands of cameras, including Reolink in the mix. But your average end-user is not going to setup a dedicated computer when an NVR is much more cost effective.
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