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advice on buying a trail cam
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Topic: advice on buying a trail cam (Read 690 times)
westsidebuckslayer
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Location: buckley
Posts: 23
advice on buying a trail cam
«
on:
February 09, 2010, 01:18:34 AM »
I am looking to buy a trail cam would be my first one just woundering if mabe you guys can help me out and tell me witch one are good and bad not a big budget eather around $150 probley thank you
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Titan-1
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Location: Chehalis Wa
Posts: 335
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Re: advice on buying a trail cam
«
Reply #1 on:
February 09, 2010, 05:40:32 PM »
I like the Moultrie cam's my self. They are inexpensive so if it gets stolen it's a tad less painfull and they work just fine. Slow on the trigger speed but if you position them right you will be fine. good luck.
«
Last Edit: February 10, 2010, 02:30:46 PM by Titan-1
»
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Jellymon
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Location: Spanaway
Posts: 25
Re: advice on buying a trail cam
«
Reply #2 on:
February 09, 2010, 07:57:50 PM »
I think the mid level bushnell cam is the best for the price. I think around 150?. Mine had very fast trigger speed and a long range. Took great pics too....till a bear ate it.
I know you said 150 but the new little bushnell cam at 199 works awesome! The trigger speed is faster than my cuddeback and it has every feature you would want. Video, 3 shot burst, Infrared, and it fits into your pocket. The batteries have lasted longer than one month with cheap batteries too. I think bushnells cameras are overlooked for how good they are! If my cuddeback ever gets eaten(stolen) Im going to get the bushnell.
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bonkellekter
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Location: Monroe, WA
Posts: 135
Re: advice on buying a trail cam
«
Reply #3 on:
February 09, 2010, 08:37:25 PM »
$100
One of the most important things that a camera needs to make it worth a $#!% is decent battery life. Moultrie D-40, Bushnell trail sentry and wildview game cams have terrible battery life especially in cold weather (2 days to 2 weeks average depending on temp) but an external 12v battery can be used to help them perform better.
$150
My Moultrie M-40 has a reported 150 day battery life - I have not had my M-40 out for and longer than 12 days and it still was reading 99% battery life. In march I will be putting this camera out with an external 12v until it dies.
$200
My next camera (when I can afford it) will be the Bushnell trophy cam - with a full set of AAA batteries it has a reported battery life of 12 months and it is half the size as my other cameras.
There are many other cameras out there but these are the only ones that I have experience with - hope this helps
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Shawn Ryan
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Location: Battle Ground, WA
Posts: 79
Snoozing in elk country.
Re: advice on buying a trail cam
«
Reply #4 on:
February 09, 2010, 10:36:46 PM »
Westsidebuckslayer,
I had the same question a short while ago. After hours of internet research I decided on the Bushnell Trophy Cam. Amazon had the model with the view screen for less than $200--only $10 more than the text screen. (I got mine on Ebay. Hope I'm not sorry about that later.) I don't have any experience with the camera, but that is were I ended up. Its size, battery life, view screen, range, and how those features met my needs were my deciding factors. If you get one, read the manual. All of the bad reviews I read appeared to have been avoidable by following the instructions. This review and the Chasing Game website were really helpful:
http://www.chasingame.com/index.php?id=85.
Good luck with your decision; hope your dollars are well spent.
Shawn
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buckmaster_wa
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Location: Selah
Posts: 359
Re: advice on buying a trail cam
«
Reply #5 on:
February 09, 2010, 11:50:49 PM »
I just bought the two pack of the wildview 2.0s. They take really good pictures but the battery life is terrible. I believe the two pack was in the bargain cave at Cabelas for $129.
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DOsborn
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Location: Battle Ground
Posts: 9
Re: advice on buying a trail cam
«
Reply #6 on:
February 10, 2010, 06:54:14 PM »
My wife bought me a bushnell trophy cam at bi mart before X mas for $169. Its been in the woods ever since on the same set of batterys, last week was still 50%. Take good pictures, easy to use, and alot of features for the money. I added a bear safe box to help keep it safe. great camera.
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Skyvalhunter
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Location: Snoqualmie Pass
Posts: 2667
Re: advice on buying a trail cam
«
Reply #7 on:
February 11, 2010, 06:04:31 AM »
Just remember with the Bushnell Trophy it only has a 2 gig card size and if its out in a busy area for a while it will fill the card up. The Moultrie I40 has a great battery life and can take a 4gb card. Ryan has a decent breakdown but there are so many other trail cams out there.
«
Last Edit: February 11, 2010, 06:13:48 AM by Skyvalhunter
»
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bonkellekter
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Location: Monroe, WA
Posts: 135
Re: advice on buying a trail cam
«
Reply #8 on:
February 11, 2010, 06:20:43 AM »
Quote from: Skyvalhunter on February 11, 2010, 06:04:31 AM
Just remember with the Bushnell Trophy it only has a 2 gig card size and if its out in a busy area for a while it will fill the card up. The Moultrie I40 has a great battery life and can take a 4gb card. Ryan has a decent breakdown but there are so many other trail cams out there.
The new trophy cam for 2010 will take up to 16 GB card. That is the one I am saving my money for.
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markts
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Sourdough
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Location: Wishkah Washington
Posts: 1960
Re: advice on buying a trail cam
«
Reply #9 on:
February 11, 2010, 06:29:01 AM »
Not sure where the test results on the Moultrie D-40 came from but I love mine and the battries last over a month with hundreds of pics taken.(we didnt get very cold here while mine were out)
Mark
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Frontiersman
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Location: einsedlerhof, germany
Posts: 2721
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Re: advice on buying a trail cam
«
Reply #10 on:
February 11, 2010, 06:32:28 AM »
i looked and looked for quite some time. didnt want to spend more than 150. wanted descent pictures. SD slot. ended up ordering the moultrie D40. after seeing itget descent reviews through hundreds of writeups and still cost less than 100$ it became the one for me. it is still in the mail. takes a little longer to get things from the states sent over here. i'll do a write up when i get it.
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bonkellekter
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Location: Monroe, WA
Posts: 135
Re: advice on buying a trail cam
«
Reply #11 on:
February 11, 2010, 09:28:23 AM »
Quote from: markts on February 11, 2010, 06:29:01 AM
Not sure where the test results on the Moultrie D-40 came from but I love mine and the battries last over a month with hundreds of pics taken.(we didnt get very cold here while mine were out)
Mark
These are my personal test results from NE WA. in Nov/Dec. It was very cold (down to 7 deg a couple days). The Cold weather hammers the batteries. These cameras were also set on the 3-shot mode and overnight I was getting anywhere from 150-350 pictures. So lots of activity, mostly all flash pics and cold weather so It was really the extreme test for battery life. My moultrie M-40 test was in Montana for 12 days and it got down to Zero a couple days and I don't think it ever made it out of the teens but I had very little activity on this setup and when I removed the camera it read 99% battery life.
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Skyvalhunter
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Location: Snoqualmie Pass
Posts: 2667
Re: advice on buying a trail cam
«
Reply #12 on:
February 11, 2010, 11:54:38 AM »
The I-40 works great for me as far as winter use and long battery life. I also leave mine out up to 5 months over the summer with no battery life problem. I have a few Stealths with external batteries that have treated me well also. I am just figuring out the external battery for home brews but the clarity can't be beat.
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Snowman
Longhunter
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Location: Gold Bar,Wa.
Posts: 909
Re: advice on buying a trail cam
«
Reply #13 on:
February 11, 2010, 11:57:35 AM »
I bought the the Busnell Trail Sentry for $100.00 and like it. Other than the fact of the only pics I got so far, are barn cats!
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bonkellekter
Hunter
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Location: Monroe, WA
Posts: 135
Re: advice on buying a trail cam
«
Reply #14 on:
February 11, 2010, 12:17:05 PM »
Quote from: Skyvalhunter on February 11, 2010, 11:54:38 AM
The I-40 works great for me as far as winter use and long battery life. I also leave mine out up to 5 months over the summer with no battery life problem. I have a few Stealths with external batteries that have treated me well also. I am just figuring out the external battery for home brews but the clarity can't be beat.
So far I really like my M-40 (the only diff. from theI-40 is the M-40 is Flash rather than IR). I know that eventually I will build a homebrew
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