System information
English
22
Camera No.: The camera feed you want to alter the settings 
for. These will be numbered sequentially, and correspond to 
the BNC video inputs labelled on the rear of the DVR. Note 
that the channel name here is independent of the Camera Name 
selected on the Display: Camera menu screen. 
Encoding Parameters (advanced user option): Whether 
you’re editing the parameters for the mainstream or the 
substream.
Main-Stream: The main-stream is the video feed that the DVR 
will record and display. This is the higher-quality stream.
Sub-Stream: The sub-stream is the video stream that the DVR 
will send to remote devices via a network or the Internet. It is the 
lower-quality stream as a reduction in video size makes it easier 
to send over a network.
Record Audio: Choose whether the channel you’ve selected 
will record audio or not. If you don’t have any audio devices 
connected, it’s a good idea to disable audio, as it will save 
some space on your HDD.
Resolution: How many “little dots” are going to make up your 
image. There are two options:
D1: About the same resolution as a DVD (704 x 480 for NTSC, 
or 704 x 576 for PAL). This is the default resolution for all 
channels, and we suggest leaving this setting well alone.
HD1: Literally, half of D1 (352 x 480 NTSC / 352 x 576 PAL) and 
about the quality of a typical YouTube video. This won’t save 
HDD space - the bitrate is the important setting for determining 
how much space your recordings require on the HDD.
CIF: 1/4 of D1 (352 x 240 NTSC / 352 x 288 PAL), and about 
the same resolution as a low-quality webcam. We can’t think 
of a good reason to use CIF as your resolution setting, unless 
you’ve some really cunning plan we didn’t think of. It won’t 
save any HDD space - for that, you’ll need to change the bitrate.
Frame Rate: The number of frames per second (fps) that the 
DVR will record. The default (and maximum) is referred to as 
“real-time” and is 30fps (NTSC) or 25fps (PAL).
Reducing the number of frames per second will either 
save hard drive space or improve the data-rate per frame 
(depending how you set the bit-rate - see the next point).
Remember that your FPS count is the same as saying “take 
X photograph per second” (where X is your FPS setting). 
5fps doesn’t sound like much, but it’s still ve individual 
photographs per second. If maintaining image clarity while 
reducing HDD consumption is your priority, it makes sense to 
lower the frame rate.
As with all settings on this screen, some experimentation is 
encouraged to nd the settings which will work best for you!
Max. BitRate(Kbps): The actual amount of data that the DVR 
will use to record video.
The main-stream uses a variable bitrate to record video - the 
more movement occurs in the video, the higher the bitrate 
will have to be. When there’s little movement in view, the DVR 
will automatically reduce the bitrate to conserve HDD space.
If the amount of movement in a recording would require a 
higher bitrate to accurately record than you’ve selected as the 
maximum, the DVR will attempt to preserve as much of the 
quality as possible by applying compression to the image. This 
compression will take the form of irregular, fuzzy blocks over 
segments or all of the image. If you encounter this, it indicates 
that you might need to increase the overall bitrate.
If you’ve set a high bitrate but a low frame rate, the DVR will 
still use all the data it can, resulting in potentially higher 
quality per frame than at higher frame rates.
The  sub-stream uses a constant bit-rate. This makes the 
video easier to stream over a network or the Internet. 
Recording: Encode
The Recording: Encode menu allows to  
alter and customize how the DVR records 
footage and “encodes” the les.
“Encoding” is a term which refers to 
the  compression algorithm (a fancy, 
computer term for “make the le smaller 
while retaining visual quality”) used by 
the DVR.
You can choose and alter:
• the resolution (per channel),
• the frame rate (how many images 
per second the DVR records) and
• the data-rate of each video stream. 
The higher the data rate, the “better” 
your images will look, but the more 
space they’ll require on your HDD.










