I got a long life battery for the Reveal camera. Sent to me by Cabela’s by mistake. They said to just keep it. You want it?Not yet but I just got one.
Yeah sure! I will PM you.I got a long life battery for the Reveal camera. Sent to me by Cabela’s by mistake. They said to just keep it. You want it?
IF it is what I'm thinking it is it will only fit in some of their models.I got a long life battery for the Reveal camera. Sent to me by Cabela’s by mistake. They said to just keep it. You want it?
I don't have the Reveal. I did acquire 5 new camera this year. 4 Spypoints and 1 Muddy. Both are adequate but don't have a lot of pixels. What I would recommend, regardless of which camera you pick, is to get one with cellular coverage.
It's a whole lot better to get pics on your phone or iPad than to have to go out to the cameras and pull the card to see what's on it.
Yes ^^^, retrieving the card and then scrolling thru 200 rabbit and squirrel videos to get to the deer or other preferred images gets old. Also noticed that rechargeable AA batteries don't last long when temps get too far below freezing, tends to significantly shorten the run time. Got only 4-5 days out of um when temps were single digits here recently. Just FYI.It's a whole lot better to get pics on your phone or iPad than to have to go out to the cameras and pull the card to see what's on it.
Yes ^^^, retrieving the card and then scrolling thru 200 rabbit and squirrel videos to get to the deer or other preferred images gets old. Also noticed that rechargeable AA batteries don't last long when temps get too far below freezing, tends to significantly shorten the run time. Got only 4-5 days out of um when temps were single digits here recently. Just FYI.
Solar is really nice if your camera location is open enough for it to get regular sunlight. Unfortunately most of my cameras are in places that only get much sunlight when the leaves are all off.Cold weather is when a solar panel really comes into play. I put 5 cameras on solar this year in July. They are still on the same set of AA batteries, and @ 100% life.
Solar is really nice if your camera location is open enough for it to get regular sunlight. Unfortunately most of my cameras are in places that only get much sunlight when the leaves are all off.
I was a muddy/stealth cam dealer for a bit. I was to ashamed of them to sell them to my customers. 20 personal cameras to test.
9 didn't work out of the box.
8.5 total hours on hold theying to get them fixed (and that's on the dealer line, not customer line)
No way I was going to put my customers through that, I literally threw them in the trash including the working ones, and called it a real expensive lesson. I knew if I sold the 9 working cameras for 20 bucks, they would quit working, no customer support from GSM, and someone would expect me to make it right, so I skipped the middle man.
Not for me, normally the batteries in my Cuddelinks plus a power bank is enough to run them October through mid-January, even with some really cold days in the mix. Where the solar panels would be most useful to me is from late May through the end of September when my batteries can almost but quite make the full length of time. Most of my cameras are in areas where openings are the exception not the rule.Cold weather is when the solar really pays off, and we don't get many sub 10 dehree days while leaves are on.
A couple of my panels are in kansas, and the closest shade is 1 mile away, so a panel will run them all year without issue