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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Trail Cams & Pic's
Best night image quality and flash distance on no/low-glow cam
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<blockquote data-quote="BSK" data-source="post: 4992376" data-attributes="member: 17"><p>That's the problem mega, trying to get something deer won't notice that will "reach out" into a food plot. However, much about no-glow versus low-glow depends on who gives that camera that classification! A manufacturer calling their camera a "low-glow" means it's a red flash. A review site calling a camera low-glow because someone with great eyes can see a faint glow in a dark closet may not mean deer can see it. I've been using Browning cameras that Browning calls no glow, but review sites sometimes call low-glow because someone can see a faint glow, yet after hundreds of night-time videos of deer right up against the camera and not one deer reacting to the flash turning on in video mode suggests to me the deer can't see it.</p><p></p><p>Although, all that said, one of my brothers-in-law wanted to play around with cell cameras on our property, and he bought cheap Spypoint red glow cameras. We put these cameras on food plots back in August. At first, the deer ABSOLUTELY noticed them and would move away from them. But now, months later, the deer really ignore them. I've also noticed I can reduce deer's reaction to the visible flash cameras if I mount them high and pointing down into large open areas. Basically, I mount them as high on a tree as I can reach while standing on the rack of my ATV.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BSK, post: 4992376, member: 17"] That's the problem mega, trying to get something deer won't notice that will "reach out" into a food plot. However, much about no-glow versus low-glow depends on who gives that camera that classification! A manufacturer calling their camera a "low-glow" means it's a red flash. A review site calling a camera low-glow because someone with great eyes can see a faint glow in a dark closet may not mean deer can see it. I've been using Browning cameras that Browning calls no glow, but review sites sometimes call low-glow because someone can see a faint glow, yet after hundreds of night-time videos of deer right up against the camera and not one deer reacting to the flash turning on in video mode suggests to me the deer can't see it. Although, all that said, one of my brothers-in-law wanted to play around with cell cameras on our property, and he bought cheap Spypoint red glow cameras. We put these cameras on food plots back in August. At first, the deer ABSOLUTELY noticed them and would move away from them. But now, months later, the deer really ignore them. I've also noticed I can reduce deer's reaction to the visible flash cameras if I mount them high and pointing down into large open areas. Basically, I mount them as high on a tree as I can reach while standing on the rack of my ATV. [/QUOTE]
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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Trail Cams & Pic's
Best night image quality and flash distance on no/low-glow cam
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