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The following could cause ghosting/unwanted image artefacts:Thanks in that case, I think I may be able to find it if I play about in the settings. I think I'm experiencing ghosting as I've noticed that when people are walking past at night, it seems like there's a little ghost that follows behind their movement.
- Using H265+ (as opposed to H265). I've had cases of static images being left persistent.
- Noise reduction. Leave at standard. Setting too high causes the image to look soft as it uses time and space pixel comparison to determine what is noise (time looks at the previous frames pixels, space looks at adjacent pixels and matches them).
- Smoothing setting. Best left at default. Too low will cause the bit rate to burst beyond its setting and too high could cause ghosting.
Unfortunately that's expected. View the image at its native resolution, what you see is what you get. With a 4K image on a 1080P screen you may get away with a little digital zoom but you can't digitally zoom beyond the native resolution of the camera and resolve any additional detail. What you will see is noise.Also, I've noticed that when I do try to zoom into faces on our drivrway, there is a lot of blur and makes the faces almost seem like old games console characters.
I usually initially set the contrast to 45 (there are actually 'steps' of about 10 so you wouldn't notice any difference between smaller changes). A slight adjustment of the contrast has a pseudo WDR effect brightening the shadow areas of an image a little. I prefer that over WDR. Do you actually need to read plate numbers? I'm always surprised at how many users base camera performance on this.The exposure is 1/100, the contrast is 35, WDR is on as it seems to help a lot with plate numbers. The max bitrate is on 8192. I'm not sure what other settings I could change to help with this. The FPS is 25 and the video quality is on highest.
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