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- angiesonki (28904)- Feedback left by buyer.Past 6 monthsVerified purchase(¯`*•ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸(¯`*•.¸ Thankyou So Much !¸.•*´¯)¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,¸,ø•*´¯)
- hvacstoreusa (8190)- Feedback left by buyer.Past yearVerified purchaseThank you for an easy, pleasant transaction. Excellent buyer. A++++++.
- myautopartsstore (7371)- Feedback left by buyer.Past yearVerified purchaseHope to deal with you again. Thank you.
- *****- Feedback left by buyer.Past yearVerified purchasePerfect part perfect seller God bless you🏁🙏🏼,
- beywarehouse (38789)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseGood buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
- lucky-board (2578)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseGood buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
Reviews (6)

Jun 27, 2018
Great Upgrade Kit. Easy to Install.
1 of 1 found this helpful Perfect upgrade kit, and easy to install. Just don't be afraid when installing the spring steel. Really stuff it down into each slot all the way until each small tab pops into its notch on the valve arm. I thought it would kink, but it doesn't.

Jan 05, 2016
Great Light for the Money
I was pleasantly surprised at the quality of this product, both in the build and the lighting it provides. It's for my wife to shoot youtube videos and it makes a dramatic difference in the quality of the raw and final videos.

Feb 15, 2016
Good System for the Money, But There are Caveats
Everything in the system works just as you would expect. It's not a very automatic setup, but it can be done with some networking knowledge. The camera quality in both night and day modes is VERY good. There are zoom and focus knobs on the cameras so you can literally dial it in for what you need. The POE (power-over-ethernet) works right out of the box. This was my first POE device and I wasn't sure about the 48V on the line versus the camera, which lists a 12V input. It's fine, because the POE device negotiates the POWER requirement and the voltage is irrelevant. It will not fry the camera. It literally changes the voltage to meet the power requirement, which allows various cable length runs to work without problems.
The Caveats:
Setup on each camera takes place through a "web" interface. This means you plug the camera in and it answers at a page 192-168-1-10 as you would expect. The problem is that the web page the camera serves isn't formed correctly. You can log in --with Firefox, but the next page will not have the necessary menus and buttons to effect any changes for that camera. I tried Firefox and IE on both Vista and Win 10 machines, but nothing worked. They offer a bunch of plugins for IE and those didn't help either. On Internet explorer you can't log in at all. I was finally able to configure new IP addresses for the camera by installing their software and allowing it to detect (port scan) the network. Then you can click on a camera and change the settings on that screen and they will be pushed to the camera. But the username and password are not on that screen. I think that changing the IP addresses isn't even necessary, as the configuration program was able to differentiate between cameras even though they all had the same IP address.
So it appears you can't, to my knowledge, change the password on the cameras. This may not necessarily present a security threat, but I would prefer to change everything away from default. It's my belief that as long as the DVR is secured I'll be fine, since that is the internet-accessible point in the system. In my case it's the perimeter of the house I'm recording, so I really don't care if voyeuristic people want to take a look. They'll move on pretty quickly.