Well if I had known. Yes I would move it. Not a cell. Don't have the ability to reset..@Mr.Bro any reason you want that many pics of the same deer just standing there? My settings would be changed, but that's just me.
I remember back in the days of film trail-cameras and my 36-shot roll getting used up on one doe licking a salt lick for an hour!Last week, I had a doe bed right in front of one of my cell cams. She was only around a couple hours, but there were over 100 pics of her in those 2 hrs. Was really glad that cam was programmed to only take 2 pics every minute, instead of 3 every 5 seconds!
No it's not my job. It's my pleasure. But not this much.Word of advice Mr.Bro, don't make it your job. Last year I set a new record analyzing just hair over 297,000 trail-cam images for photo-censuses. That's all I do from right around now until mid-January.
More often for me, I would go back a couple weeks later to retrieve & replace the film, new batteries, only to then rush to Walmart, pay to develop that film, pay extra for 1-hr processing, wait around for my prints . . . . .I remember back in the days of film trail-cameras and my 36-shot roll getting used up on one doe licking a salt lick for an hour!
The first commercially available system was the Trailmaster 1500. It cost $1,200 back in the early 90s. It had a sending and receiving unit that sent an infrared beam across the trail. Anything interrupting the beam triggered the camera. I learned early on not to set them up on trees that sway in the wind! Mounting them on t-posts was essential.What's more, those film cams actually cost more at the time of purchase than most of what we buy today, over two decades later. Adjust that for the cost of inflation. Cams are comparatively cheap today, especially on a per pic basis.
When those Uways came out, everyone was impressed with the quality of their images. They were great pics. Unfortunately, the cams otherwise had poor quality control, and the brand didn't survive. At about that time, Bushnells were my "go-to" brand, and later Covert.Once the internal camera battles (camera with integral internal digital cameras) started, I think the first Uway cameras cost around $600 each, about the time the first Covert and Bushnell cameras were coming out.
I remember the trail-timers. I actually found one in our cabin a few weeks ago that had never been used. Looked brand new and like it just came off the shelfBefore I had "trail cams", I had trail-checker "timers", that documented the time something passed by. There was no picture. Later, I obtained "homebrew" trail cams that used real Sony cameras. Only until very recently have the commercial digital trail cams generally passed the image quality of those old Sony homebrew film cams.
My first digital trail cams were "Non-Typicals" which later were re-branded Cuddebacks.
These produced 1.3 mp images, and used those gigantic "compact flash" cards.
But these were a revolutionary breakthrough compared to film cams.
Pretty sure they were @ $250, but they paid for themselves by not having to develop film.
And, I'm SURE YOU REMEMBER The Infamous Cuddeback "NO-COUNT" which falsely advertised "invisible" flash, selling for only $399 @ 20 years ago?
When those Uways came out, everyone was impressed with the quality of their images. They were great pics. Unfortunately, the cams otherwise had poor quality control, and the brand didn't survive. At about that time, Bushnells were my "go-to" brand, and later Covert.
There was also a brand called Leaf River which I really liked @ 20 yrs ago. But the lower-cost foreign competition eventually pushed them out. The cams today most recently providing me the best overall balance of price, longevity, and service have been Brownings and Ridgetecs (not to be confused with Ridgeline).
Regardless of branding, most today are decent. Some are just better than others.
I've tried many brands & models, but certainly not all.Also tried at least one of just about every company's camera system: Stealth, Moultrie, Wildview, Bushnell, Covert, Reconyx, etc. Now I've settled on the Brownings. They are the best cameras I've ever used.