Yea that can be the case alright. After getting used to this camera in my NB, I soon fitted one on the
centre brake light above the doors on my work van, a Citroen Dispatch, and a 7inch screen hanging
from the ceiling where the mirror would be, if the van had rear windows.
When it comes to judging the distances, while investigating the refusal of the ND to stay connected to
the camera, I discovered that this camera is worth twice what I paid for it. The guide lines are adjustable with a little button on the cable where the power and video cables combine.
This is the view I have had for years.
These are the actual distances
After a bit of practice with the wee button.
With this layout, a lot less cramped.
The two farthest cans are just about level with the width of the car
Or dead straight ahead the black cap is just visible.
When I bought it I knew that the button could turn the lines on and off, and it could switch the view
Left to Right and Upside-down.
I checked out other cameras of the same brand on Amazon as mine is no longer available
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00ZCJI4NE/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o06_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
I was looking to see if it was PAL or NTSC because the cable I got has a NTSC label on the video socket,
I discovered that with the right number of presses and pauses I could switch the output between PAL
and NTSC as well as change the length and width of the lines with 4 different choices each.
I connected the camera to a 7inch TV I have that can be switched to accept PAL or NTSC or auto and
discovered it had been on PAL output until now, and the infotainment screen was showing a good
picture after a reboot. Using the button I changed it to NTSC hoping that would fix the need for
the rebooting, but it didn't. I just seem to have proved that contrary to info on the internet, this
system will accept either video format.
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