Chapter 1 — introduction, Feature, Technical overview – Revo RE8/16DVR1 User Manual

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Digital Video Recorder

1

Chapter 1 — Introduction


Feature


Your color digital video recorder (DVR) provides recording capabilities for eight or 16 camera inputs. It provides
exceptional picture quality in both live and playback modes, and offers the following features:

 8 or 16 Composite Video Input Connectors
 Compatible with Color (NTSC or PAL) and B&W (CCIR and EIA-170) Video Sources
 Auto Detection for NTSC and PAL
 H.264 Codec
 Multiple Monitor Connectors: 1 BNC Video Out, 1 Spot, 1 VGA
 Multiple Search Engines (Date/Time, Calendar, Record Table, Event)
 Real-time Recording (480/400 Images per Second (NTSC/PAL) with Standard (CIF) Resolution)
 “Loop-Through” Video Connectors
 Continuous Recording in Disk Overwrite Mode
 2 USB 2.0 Ports
 Continues Recording while Transmitting to Remote Site and during Playback
 User-friendly Graphical User Interface (GUI) Menu System
 Multiple Recording Modes (Time-lapse, Pre-event, Alarm, Motion and Panic)
 Two-way Audio Communication
 4-Channel Audio Recording and 1-Channel Audio Playback
 Text Input for ATM and POS
 Alarm Connections Include: Input, Output and Reset Input
 Built-in Alarm Buzzer
 Live or Recorded Video Access via Ethernet
 Time Synchronization using industry standard protocol
 Built-in DVD RW Drive
 IR Remote Control
 Self-diagnostics with automatic notification including hard disk drive S.M.A.R.T. protocol


Technical Overview


In addition to replacing both a time-lapse VCR and a multiplexer in a security installation, your DVR has many features
that make it much more powerful and easier to use than even the most advanced VCR.

The DVR converts analog NTSC or PAL video to digital images and records them on a hard disk drive. Using a hard
disk drive allows you to access recorded video almost instantaneously; there is no need to rewind tape. The technology
also allows you to view recorded video while the DVR continues recording video.

Digitally recorded video has several advantages over analog video recorded on tape. There is no need to adjust tracking.
You can freeze frames, fast forward, fast reverse, slow forward and slow reverse without image streaking or tearing.
Digital video can be indexed by time or events, and you can instantly view video after selecting the time or event.

Your DVR can be set up for event or time-lapse recording. You can define times to record, and the schedule can change
for different days of the week and user defined holidays.

The DVR can be set up to alert you when the hard disk drive is full, or it can be set to record over the oldest video once
the disk is full.

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