
Description
The Aposonic A-BR13B4-C500 is an advanced 960H 8-Channel H.264 multifunctional surveillance system that allows users to access it remotely from both the internet via browsers as IE, Firefox, Chrome, Safari and tablets or 3G/4G smart phones as iPhone, Android, Blackberry, and Windows WP. # Package includes:
* A-S0804R18E 8-ch DVR x 1
* A-CM700F1 700 TVL CMOS 66' IR Bullet Camera x 4.
* 66 Feet BNC Cable x 4
* IR Remote Control x 1
* Power adapter & Power splitter
* 500GB HDD Pre-installed.
# 1-year parts warranty, 2-year labor warranty. Life-time Technical support.
Features
- 960H/D1/Half D1/CIF Real-Time Auto-Adjusted Recording / Playback Quality. Recording 960x480 / 720x480 / 720x240 up to 30 FPS per channel.
- Support UPnP, No port-forwarding is needed.
- Surveillance Motion & Sensitivity Zones - DVR Motion detection triggered events can be promptly notified by loud audible alert and / or Email notifications to PCs or smart phones.
- Eventful Alerts - Configurable per channel, Surveillance Signal Loss, Motion Trigger, Audible Alarm, Alert Durations, Recording Log Management. Pre-installed 500GB SATA drive.
- Live view and access control through Internet Explorer, Firefox, Chrome, and Mac OSX/safari. Streaming live video / Playback on mobile smart phones or tablets via free app.
Customer Reviews

NewDad
Based on the nice feedback on Newegg, I chose to buy the system on Amazon due to the tax issue...Anyway, no complaint! The CCD sensor cameras faithfully deliver video quality crystally clear!The control graphic design is easily understandable.After did the portforwarding, set the network configuration, and install the app on app store, I now can live view on my iPhone.I noticed that I had to run a batch file in my computer and then I can have full remote control under Firefox or Chrome.If you are a fan of Firefox or Chrome like me, this system should currently be the best choice in the market.If you use IE browser, you don't need to install anything as the system's optimal default is for IE.

John Becich
My family and friends have bought Aposonic "E" series DVRs (similar to what is shown here) with very good results. Everything works. Tech support by telephone is excellent. These DVRs are rare in their provision for external alarm inputs, a reliable avenue for intrusion detection; most competitors have nothing here at all. I even tested audio input and output... there was some undesirable feedback from output to input channel 1 ... apparently a design flaw in the "E" series printed circuit board... so I simply voided one channel of audio input. I am EECS and very thorough...I recommend that you install freebie surveillance App in your smartphone, before you buy anything... from anybody. There are various Aposonic DVRs here that use various Apps. Yes, I inspect from a distance, by desktop computers (Windows and Apple) and smartphones (Android and Apple).It's tricky for layperson to get remote access, over the internet; he must know how to configure router at the site where the DVR exists.I bought one DVR of the non-E series... it used TapCMS app on Android... but I found that DVR to be undesirable so I exchanged it for an "E" series, with satisfactory results. "Non-E" had e-mail erraticisms... and user's interface (through IE) was less refined than that for the "E" series.

Shelli Landers
this is so nice its worth every thing and we feel so safe with it think evey one should have one

Andy B.
I fully understand now why a professional DVR costs much more than these types advertised. Where do I start. The manual appears to be a "Chinglish" translation. Software is a house of cards that does collapse often. For some reason the DVR "resets" all the camera, record and alarms settings to off or some other feature you did not choose. You then spend hours wandering through menus trying to get back to where you started (back up your settings to USB!!), and ultimately you can never get it truly back to where it was. You compromise and learn to live with your life when a "feature" you once had can no longer be turned on or off. Case in point the DVR was set to trip its external alarm relay when the cameras detect motion. Now for some reason it can't be turned back on. Months have passed with me fiddling with it. The most recent head scratcher is the clock feature, the time sometime sticks and then the cameras don't turn off after my preset 10 second record time, the GMT sync doesn't work and the clock is a day off, reset it and check it the next day and its stuck on the previous day. When the clock does decide to actually give you the time, it just counts through 24 hours and starts over, no day change. Oh yeah the E-mail alert feature worked for the first week now confounds me as to why it quit.The video quality? Well I knew I wasn't going to get very good quality, I'm simply trying to catch the neighbors dogs crapping in my yard and look for when I get deliveries. For that I have to say its OK, and again, you get what you pay for.I bought this system because it had less complaints than the Zmodo, QSee, Defender, Bunker Hill, etc systems, but if I was to guess they all roll off the same Chinese assembly line.Read more ›
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