registration is free , easy and welcomed !!!
Started by Timmer, August 02, 2022, 08:13:21 AM
Quote from: guesswho on August 02, 2022, 08:49:30 AMI have nine of the Cuddebacks. Going on year three with zero issues. The only complaint I have is the pictures that are sent to your phone aren't the best quality, but they do that because of the data usuage. The pictures on the cards are great. A big advantage with Cuddeback is their cuddelink system. All nine of mine are under one cell plan. You have one home camera and up to I think 23 remote cameras. The remote cameras send their pictures to your home camera, and then the home camera sends them to my phone. My cell plan runs $20 a month for 2000 pictures, and if it goes over that I pay $5 extra for another 2000. And you can have the pictures sent to 10 different phones that doesn't go against your monthly count. If you wanted to see some test pictures, pm me your cell number and carrier AT&T, Verizon etc. and I would be happy to add you to mine for a couple days. Good luck
Quote from: guesswho on August 02, 2022, 07:44:37 PMMy property isn't flat, but it's not big hills either, and mostly big mature hardwoods. The farthest camera from my home camera is about 3/4 of a mile, and about 300 yards to the next camera. I've never had any issues, the farthest I've had one camera send directly to the home camera is probably 600 yards. They will send pictures directly to the home camera if in range, if not they will piggy back off another camera closer by. I honestly haven't had any issues, but have read where some have had connectivity issues in some situations. If you just had a home camera and one remote camera I can see where hills and thick vegetation may hinder the performance. But I run 9 so I can cover a large area no problem. If you have cell coverage on your phone your home camera should work.
Quote from: cuttinAR on August 02, 2022, 07:53:23 PMQuote from: guesswho on August 02, 2022, 07:44:37 PMMy property isn't flat, but it's not big hills either, and mostly big mature hardwoods. The farthest camera from my home camera is about 3/4 of a mile, and about 300 yards to the next camera. I've never had any issues, the farthest I've had one camera send directly to the home camera is probably 600 yards. They will send pictures directly to the home camera if in range, if not they will piggy back off another camera closer by. I honestly haven't had any issues, but have read where some have had connectivity issues in some situations. If you just had a home camera and one remote camera I can see where hills and thick vegetation may hinder the performance. But I run 9 so I can cover a large area no problem. If you have cell coverage on your phone your home camera should work. Thanks for the info. I'm gonna give it a shot, I've got big hardwoods but also big hills. In the hollers I get no reception. Up top 2-3 bars of Verizon LTE but for whatever reason it doesn't work well. Planning on the ATT option.