
IIVZINRS0101-Quick-Setup.doc Page 5 of 5
Frame Rate
> 25 FPS
Using a slower frame rate
(i.e.15 FPS), will increase the
length of movie time that can
be recorded on to the SD card,
but movements will look jerky
(like an old Keystone Cops
movie), when played back.
Resolution
> D1
Note: this controls the size of
the image recorded (measured
in pixels), which combined with
Compression Rate, determines
the quality of the images you
record. “D1” is the highest
quality (704x576 pixels)
Compression Ratio
> High
Recording at “25FPS”, “D1”
Resolution and “High”
Compression Rate provides
high quality recordings and
allows approximately 1 hour of
continuous video recording per
1 GB of SD Memory Card
Record Overwrite
> On
Note: if Record Overwrite is set
to “Off” when the SD Card is
full, recording will stop. If set to
“On”, when the card is full, the
system will carry on recording,
continuously over-recording the
oldest images first.
Transit Stamp
> Off
GPS positioning related (not a
feature of this DVR)
Time Stamp
> On
Note: set this to “On” to record
time and date on the video
images
Congratulations;…if you’ve completed the quick set-up as above, your system is now ready to record.
Powering on and off & Auto Recording;
The system automatically starts recording images from the camera when you power the DVR on.
(note: the DVR can be powered off via the Remote Control handset, but you will need to power the system
on again via the external power supply switch)
Playing back your recorded video;
Recorded video can be replayed;
• Directly from the DVR to a Monitor or TV connected to the DVR’s “Audio & Video Out” connection
• By connecting the DVR to a PC via the USB connection cable supplied *
• By extracting the SD Card and inserting it into a card reader connected to a PC *
* When playing back video recordings on a PC, any “Player” software that supports AVI files can be
used including free, standard software such as; Windows Media Player, etc.