I recently purchased and setup four Stick-Up Cam Battery cameras for my home, but after placement they are all close enough to an outlet to use that instead. Am I better off returning the battery cameras and getting the plug in ones w/ an extra battery for each, or just getting the power adapter for the existing cameras? Is there any difference between the two models if both of them have batteries and are powered externally?
Hello @WattGoodman ,
Those are two good questions!
- âIs there any difference between the two models?â
Most people do not realize that when you purchase the âStick Up Cam Batteryâ and the âStick Up Cam Plug-inâ that they are indeed the same Ring device! Both communicate their video data to your Wi-Fi router at 2.4 GHz. What initially makes them different is what comes in the purchased box.
- âStick Up Cam Batteryâ comes with a Quick Release Battery Pack.
- âStick Up Cam Plug-inâ comes without a battery (has an empty battery-compartment) and has a two electrical power cords that can be used as a single 8-foot long cord or combined to form a 22.9-foot long cord.
But whenever you can use âplug-inâ power, YES, you definitely should use the âStick Up Cam Plug-inâ version! Because the externally powered camera will then have better features with less drawbacks! These Stick Up Cams (Battery & Plug In) devices come from the factory with the same factory software firmware hard-loaded on them. But during your setup, depending if you designate that it will be powered by a battery or a power-cord, it will then download different firmware to provide different options and capabilities. Several features will be different. So now, after the setup procedures, the âBatteryâ and âPlug-inâ cameras are different in what they can do!
Without battery-life issues to worry about, the âStick Up Cam Plug-inâ will have many more feature options that are âhigh-energy-draining.â These include improved adaptive Motion-zones that can be tailored in pretty precise area-coverage, and quicker âSnapshotâ intervals (as fast as a recorded Shapshot every 30-seconds). Both the âBatteryâ and âPlug-inâ cameras have video options of recording for a maximum of 120-seconds per motion-triggered-event to increase the chances of filming a critical activity.
The âStick Up Cam Batteryâ will only download firmware that is simpler (that uses less âpower-drainingâ computing algorithms) with limited option features, in order to extend battery-life. And then, if you couple that with using the long 120-second recording-length and the quickest Snapshot interval (lowest time-interval is only once every 5-minutes), you would deplete your battery even quicker resulting in recharging your battery even that much more frequently. If you want to avoid frequent battery recharging, then you will probably need to âdial-backâ from the longest recording-length and increase the time between Snapshots.
Concerning âSnapshotsâ that are the âstill photographsâ maintained on the Ring âCloudâ for up to 7-days. When activity is beyond the motion-detection âtriggering rangeâ, these Snapshots have the potential to photograph important activity. The more frequent, faster, shorter-interval setting with the âplug-inâ cam will increase your chances of catching a critical image. Also the Battery-power camera can only store a maximum of 2.5 MB, and Plug-in powered camera has the increased 30 MB worth of snapshots storage. Once the 7-day limit and/or the storage limit has been reached, the oldest snapshots will be overwritten by newer ones. So remember to download important Shapshots before they are overwritten.
- âAm I better off returning the battery cameras and getting the plug in ones w/ an extra battery for each, or just getting the power adapter for the existing cameras?â
Thatâs a personal choice, but here are some things to consider:
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Yes, you can do both, have it âPlugged-inâ and put a battery in the empty battery compartment. You should definitely want to configured it to download the âPlug-inâ firmware to take advantage of the extra options.
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If you want the battery to be used as a âback-upâ power source in case the house outlet power goes off, well, if the house is âblacked-outâ then your Wi-Fi router is out too, so itâs not really a back-up at all because the camera needs an operating Wi-Fi to record anything. I guess you could have a battery back-up (like an UPS unit) for your Wi-Fi router, but will the Internet Service Providerâs signal still be available during a power-outage if it is a city-wide outage? I dunno. But now, if you âPlugged-inâ to an outdoor house outlet, where a potential âbad guyâ could have access and simply âunplugâ your cord, then yeah, I guess having the battery would be a good thing (or hopefully you catch a video of him just before he kills the camera power). With my outdoor Stick Up cams, I routed my power cord high, through the wall for it to be plugged into an inside house outlet, and I do not have any batteries in my cams.
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The cost of having both Batteries and Cords for your 4 Stick Up Cameras.
If you decide to go âPlugged-Inâ (and I think you should!) but decided to keep your current cameras and just purchase electrical cords for them, then you probably already have completed the setup and downloaded âbattery versionâ firmware. Then I would recommend you perform a âFactory Resetâ by holding the reset button for 20-30 seconds and complete the setup procedures again. A Factory Reset wipes out any previously downloaded firmware, so youâll wipe out any âbattery versionâ firmware and start over âclean.â If you elected to return your 4 cameras entirely, you should release âOwnershipâ by utilizing the âRemove this deviceâ in the App. Otherwise youâll be shipping back cameras that canât be used by anyone else (unless Ring has some technical way of overriding this feature . . . again, I dunno).
Lastly, if you are curious about what I meant by, _âit has a two electrical power cords that can be used as a single 8-foot long cord or combined to form a 22.9-foot long cordâ _you can click this link and see what I wrote, with pictures, in another post (be sure to read the entire post, because I had to make a correction in the actual measured lengths):
Well, sorry if I rambled on a bit, but I hope that this information is helpful to you!