Chapter 8 hard disk drive – Q-See QC40108 User Manual

Page 31

Advertising
background image

60

61

CHAPTER 8 HARD DISK DRIVE

PICTURE 8-1

PICTURE 8-2

STEP 2

.

Remove the screw from the

hard drive cover. The cover will slide
upward for removal.

STEP 3

.

Slide out the old drive (if

present). Insert the new drive into
the slot and slide into position. It
should fit snugly into the connectors
at the bottom.

DO NOT FORCE! If

the drive does not fit firmly, remove,
check alignment and reinstall.

Whether installing the drive for the first time or removing the old one to install a new one, the
steps are largely the same:

STEP 1

.

Disconnect the DVR from the power source as well as any other connections.

STEP 4

.

Replace the hard drive cover.

8.2 CALCULATING THE RECORDING CAPACITY OF A

HARD DISK DRIVE

While the physical data capacity of a hard drive is fixed, how much video you can record upon it depends
on your recording configurations. Higher quality recordings will take up more space on the drive and setting
the DVR to record for more frequently will fill it up more rapidly.

To determine the optimal capacity for your purposes, the chart below to estimate the size of hard drive that
you’ll need.

VIDEO

FORMAT

RESOLUTION

FRAME

RATE

(FPS)

VIDEO

QUALITY

BIT

RATE

(kbps)

SPACE

USED

(MB/h)

NTSC

CIF

30

Highest

1M

465

Higher

768k

297

Medium

512k

230

Low

384k

173

Lower

256k

115

Lowest

128k

56

D1

Highest

2M

910

Higher

1.5M

712

Medium

1M

468

Lower

768K

297

Lowest

512K

241

PAL

CIF

25

Highest

1M

466

Higher

768k

295

Medium

512k

235

Low

384k

175

Lower

256k

112

Lowest

128k

56.4

D1

Highest

2M

915

Higher

1.5M

700

Medium

1M

465

Lower

768K

297

Lowest

512K

241

The formula for calculating the required disk space is:
Total Recording Capacity = Used space per hour (MB/h) x Recording time (hour) x
number of channels
Example: A customer is using the NTSC format (30 frames per second), CIF resolution
with video quality set to Lowest and a total of 16 Channels. He wants the unit to record
continuously for a month. Therefore, the calculation will look like this:

56(MB/h), x 24 (hours/day) x 30 (days) x 16 (channels) = 645,120MB or 650GB

Installing a 750GB SATA hard drive should provide enough space for one month’s continuous
recording time at those settings.

Advertising