jsmith
Well-Known Member
It's a choice between SNV for bright images in near darkness, compared to darker pictures that are clearer.
It's the same quandary currently haunting CCTV cameras.
Higher pixel cameras but dark night vision unless floodlit Vs low light sensors that need longer exposure rates (lower FPS to allow more light per frame).
It's a new feature and will be improved over time - either by firmware updates, or on newer models as the technology improves.
Per earlier reply, 1080P offers more lighting than 2k or 4k. Larger pixels let in more light. Higher definition performs more poorly at night (smaller pixels and less light). It would almost be ideal for parking mode to default to 1080P if you prefer more clarity and brightness. You are right though, it is a quandary.
Do you use less frames and get brighter image with SNV? Or use more frames and get a clearer but darker image?
The problem with SNV at 1FPS will be that a license plate that is bright color might be over exposed and unreadable.
@safedrivesolutions
Any test video of a car driving past, backing up, or going behind your vehicle at 1 FPS SNV? Then compare to 1 FPS non SNV and low bitrate FPS.