System information
English
20
Camera: Display
Camera No.: Choose the camera / channel you want to edit 
here. The Camera No is the same thing as the number written 
on the rear panel next to the BNC socket used to connect the 
camera.
Camera Name: Select a name for the camera you’ve selected. 
By default, all channels are named as the Camera No.  eld, but 
this can be set to anything you’d like up to 16 characters.
Display Camera Name: When checked, the name you’ve 
selected for the camera/channel will be displayed on-screen 
as an overlay.
Record Date: When checked, the date (as displayed) will be 
recorded directly into your videos. This can be useful, as it 
creates an inseperable record of exactly when the footage was 
captured.
OSD Display Position: Gives you access to a screen where 
you can easily set the exact positions of any overlayed text, 
such as the camera name and the date and time. 
Simply select any item you want to move (such as the Channel 
Name and/or the Date and Time) and click and drag it to the 
position you’d like it to be.
To exit the OSD Display Position screen, right click. A context 
menu will appear with two options: Save and Exit. To exit 
without saving, simply choose Exit. If you want to save your 
changes, choose Save rst.
Image Settings: Gives you access to image adjustment tools, 
allowing you to adjust the way the DVR interprets and displays 
video images. See opposite for more information.
The Image Settings you choose will aect your recorded 
footage. Rather than applying the changes after the video has 
been processed (like many older DVRs) the Image Settings aect 
how the DVR decodes the video it is receiving from the cameras.
The upside of this is that you can use the Image Settings to 
dramatically improve the quality of the images being recorded 
by the DVR. This can be particularly useful for improving the 
accuracy of your Motion Detection settings.
Mask: When checked, allows you to create, place and shape a 
“privacy mask” which obscures the view of part of the image 
on the associated channel.
Brightness:  Changes how light the image appears to be. 
However, it can’t make the camera see further in the dark, or 
increase the clarity of an ill-lit image.
Contrast: Increases the dierence between the blackest black 
and the whitest white in the image. Useful if sections of the 
image “grey out” but setting the contrast too high will degrade 
image quality.
Saturation: Alters how much color is displayed in the image. The 
higher the saturation, the more bright and vivid colors will appear 
to be. Again, setting this too high can degrade image quality. 
Hue:  Changes the color mix of the image (this can have 
very dramatic results). It’s somewhat like moving through a 
rainbow.
Remember: Your image settings will aect your recordings!
You can use the Image Settings to help ne-tune your Motion 
Detection sensitivity. At night, your camera’s images may seem 
to icker slightly, or to have increased “noise”. In video, “noise” 
is random uctuations of pixels, a little like an old television 
that is not set to a station, often called “static”.
By tweaking the Brightness and the Contrast you can eliminate 
much of this video noise, increasing the quality of your images 
and the accuracy of the Motion Detection. 
The  Display: Camera menu is where 
you can make adjustments to how the 
DVR displays the feed coming from your 
cameras. 
You can adjust aspects of each channel/
camera, such as:
• the camera’s name,
• which information will be displayed 
on-screen, and where this 
information will be displayed,
• whether information such as the 
date will be recorded directly onto 
your videos
• any areas of the video you want 
“masked” - that is, left blank.










