The IP540 is a HD camera, and it definitely has high resolution support to be considered a high definition camera. However it does not take images in a widescreen or 16:9 aspect ratio format, like the recently released Microsoft Lifecam 720p products. Instead, it utilizes the standard squarish aspect ratios of 160x120, 320x240, 640x480, and 1280x1024 which is still very common for devices of this type (as they are mostly used in a PC environment). Overall, it improves compatibility with a lot of camera software that do not yet support 16:9 webcam feeds. With a widescreen aspect ratio, feeds sometime end up looking compressed due to the aspect ratio not being recognized.

In order to judge of the image clarity and quality, some sample images were analyzed (they are reproduced below). The colors are reproduced with fairly good accuracy in medium light conditions.


Click to enlarge

The IP540 particularly excels at functioning in little or no light environments. Thanks to the 12 IR LEDs, It was capable of making pitch black rooms appear clearly, albeit in monochrome.

Click to enlarge

Video 

The Compro camera supports a wide range of output containers and codecs depending on how the device is utilized. Recording manually from the web viewer saves the video in a MKV container using either MPEG-4 (DivX) or H.264. If event triggers such as motion or audio detection are used, the automatic recording is saved in the AVI container. With ComproView, the feed is exported in the WMV format. The WMV export can handle variable frame rates and required a new software update (as will be noted in the next section.)

Video

Video Compression

  • H.264 ( MPEG-4 Part 10)
  • Motion JPEG
  • MPEG-4 Part 2
  • WMV (via export in ComproView)

Resolutions

160x120, 320 x 240, 640 x 480, 1280 x 1024

Frame Rate

  • Up to 30 frames at 640 x 480
  • Up to 15 frames at 1280 x 1024

Video Streaming

Dual H.264, MPEG-4 or MJPEG Video Streams

Image Setting

  • Adjustable image size and quality
  • AGC, AWB, AES
  • Configurable brightness, contrast, saturation and sharpness
Software Usage Other Notes
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  • ganeshts - Thursday, October 14, 2010 - link

    We heard from our Compro contact that it is possible to obtain 'weatherproof' housing for the IP camera. However, the IP540 has an auto-Iris and does not cope well with brightly lit environment, e.g. directly under the Sun.

    The IP570, when equipped with the housing, will be a candidate for outdoor PTZ camera or even as replacement for lower cost speed domes. Do note that the housing is usually only available with special projects hence, it's not available in the standard retail channels. Maybe it is possible to order it directly from Compro. You can contact them through their website.
  • dijuremo - Wednesday, October 13, 2010 - link

    I am interested in pricing. I have an old D-link DCS-6620G which broke and D-link does not offer any after warranty repair. I basically sent $600 to the trash the day I bought it. It also only works with IE for continuous video, what a piece of #*$&@$&@. Will not buy any D-link product ever again. First the PoE converter box died, then later on the camera died. They completely lost my business.

    The PoE native models should be the way to go, I hate to have to run power and network to the camera and wireless does not really cut it. In any case it will be easier to run CAT5e or CAT6 to the camera than power (have to pay an electrician).
  • Dk0524 - Tuesday, May 10, 2011 - link

    in stock at www.ipcam-central.com
  • Stuka87 - Wednesday, October 13, 2010 - link

    Could you guys maybe look at a camera that can be mounted outdoors as well? This would be incredibly handy for me, as I have a largish piece of land and can't see when people drive up from my house. Would be super handy to be able to see that from inside.
  • ganeshts - Wednesday, October 13, 2010 - link

    Sure, we will keep this in mind going forward. Thanks for your suggestion.
  • firefighter4443 - Wednesday, October 13, 2010 - link

    Thanks for the Review!

    I currently work overseas, and my place back home (USA) is frequently left alone for long periods of time. This review provided a lot of awesome information about this product, and I think it will be very helpful in setting up a remote surveillance system.

    I'm very interested in the long term storage of the video stream(s), and possible ways to lower the memory used. If I set up a remote surveillance system, I would use local and/or remote (relative's house) storage on some type of NAS device. For the sake of saving HDD space, what is the possiblity of recording a video stream at 30FPS VGA, with a Full Resolution Snapshot every second? Or what are the possibilities of some type of software (running in real-time) that could re-encode a 30FPS stream (or 15 for full resolution) down to some fraction of 30 (or 15) after an X amount of days (to be set by the user)?

    I'm thinking, in case of a burglery or some other type of crime, a lower number of high resolution frames would be more usefull than a high number of low resoulution frames. In addition, if I knew my house was checked on every x number of days or weeks, I would not need to store as many high resolution frames of historical video. Are there consumer level (and priced) software solutions for this kind of thing?

    Overall though, thanks for the excellent review!
  • bobbozzo - Thursday, October 14, 2010 - link

    There are many programs which will do motion-detection, so that recording is only done when there is movement.

    I'm using ZoneMinder (free, linux-based) on a server at home; you can have it do full recording, motion recording, time-based recording, or a combination.

    Bob
  • bhigh - Friday, October 15, 2010 - link

    This seems to be a perfect camera for a technical person to build a baby monitor around. Too bad it's not easily available in the US.
  • Saidas - Saturday, October 16, 2010 - link

    I could really use some suggestions for high end web cams for business use...preferably HD. All I find is the usual Logitech & MS fare for $50-$100 with good but not great audio/video. Either that or is its $700 video recorders. I need these as web cams for business meetings. What do businesses use? I thought there would be lots of choices but if there are I'm not seeing them.
  • HauntFox - Friday, October 22, 2010 - link

    I would just call it a PT camera.
    The image quality and the software looks nice.

    I have an Astak Mole PT camera, which would be nice, but it crashes often: when viewing the video for extended periods, or recording video.

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