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Cellular cam
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<blockquote data-quote="TheLBLman" data-source="post: 5644779" data-attributes="member: 1409"><p>Yes, very true.</p><p>But I've found when on that setting (still pic followed by video clip) it really slows down the capture time for both the still & the video, then increased the duration time between triggering events, thus causing you to potentially miss events that might have been captured by simply using either still pic mode or video mode (but not both simultaneously).</p><p></p><p>As example, when in this "dual" mode, the cam might be triggered by a deer just walking by.</p><p>The time between the triggering and the pic (or video) might be say 1/2 second. But if set in dual mode, it might be 1 second. You might think a fraction of a second shouldn't matter much, but it really can be the difference in getting the target image or completely missing it.</p><p></p><p>Using the dual mode, what I often see is rear half a deer on the still pic, and no deer at all on the video that kicks in right behind the still pic. Of course, sometimes it works perfectly too.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TheLBLman, post: 5644779, member: 1409"] Yes, very true. But I've found when on that setting (still pic followed by video clip) it really slows down the capture time for both the still & the video, then increased the duration time between triggering events, thus causing you to potentially miss events that might have been captured by simply using either still pic mode or video mode (but not both simultaneously). As example, when in this "dual" mode, the cam might be triggered by a deer just walking by. The time between the triggering and the pic (or video) might be say 1/2 second. But if set in dual mode, it might be 1 second. You might think a fraction of a second shouldn't matter much, but it really can be the difference in getting the target image or completely missing it. Using the dual mode, what I often see is rear half a deer on the still pic, and no deer at all on the video that kicks in right behind the still pic. Of course, sometimes it works perfectly too. [/QUOTE]
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