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Alle Bewertungen (27)
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Rezensionen (4)

21. Dez 2016
New old stock Bushnell
This is a "new old stock" (NOS) trail camera, meaning this model isn't made anymore (and hasn't been for a few years), but it's new and unused in the original unopened package. Why buy an old model when you can get the latest model for about the same $$$? Because, sadly, Bushnell doesn't make cameras this good any more until you get up in the $400 range. The $100 Bushnells now only have 2MP sensors (vs 5MP in this camera) that take pictures that look noisy and pixellated despite being "interpolated" up to some larger number of megapixels just so they can put that large MP number on the box. Interpolation results in an image just as bad as the original.
Worse, the newer Bushnells all "white out" or overexpose the images around dusk and dawn which is, unfortunately, the best time to see wildlife. To be fair, Moultrie uses the same tactic for megapixels (they refuse to even disclose the number) but at least their cameras don't white out. If you buy a NOS camera you MUST request a receipt because Bushnell has a two year warranty and without documentation the purchase date defaults to the date of manufacture stamped inside the camera.
Bottom line: this line of older cameras takes sharp, colorful images and the newer models in the same price range do not.

05. Feb 2019
You'll probably give up on this
It simply doesn't work. First, it needs to be modified a bit which requires some minor wood working skills that many people don't have. You have to build a ramp and fasten it to the device, you have to add some scrap wood in between the trap and the trash barrel to make it level and sturdy, and finally, even when all that's carefully done the outside part of the trap is too heavy. Even with the adjustment screws all the way up to reduce the magnetic pull it requires more than the weight of a rat to dunk them. The rats don't walk out to the edge of the plank either. They walk just far enough to lick the peanut butter. I know all this from using a trail cam over many days and nights. Additionally, the video you probably watched causing you to buy this is apparently taken inside a building where there are no raccoons, possums, or squirrels with access. All three of those animals will go after the peanut butter. The squirrels will be able to walk in and eat (without being caught) and the 'coons and possums are too large so they'll absolutely trash your ramp and anything else they can trying to get in. I REALLY wish this worked.

21. Dez 2016
Best camera in the Bushnell line
These are hideously expensive but if you want a sharp, vibrant color image, short of shivering all night in a tent with a "real" camera then this is the trail camera for you. It has lots of ACTUAL megapixel resolution (vs interpolated), it has a screw mounting on front for two (included) close up lenses that focus the camera within a few feet or even inches from the subject. Bottom line, it takes razor sharp beautiful color images and puts every other trail cam (I own 40+ cams) to shame. It has adjustable PIR sensitivity, adjustable illumination (no whited out images), time lapse, everything you need in a camera to consistently take good images.
Is it perfect? Not quite. The close up filters (of course) greatly reduce the depth of field so that you might take a picture of a bird, for instance, that has a sharp head but the rest of the bird is blurred. You don't know exactly where the animal will be when the camera snaps the image, so you'll get a lot of unusable shots but occasionally one amazing one. The other minor issue is that (in my opinion) cameras that have an IR filter over the illuminator LEDs seem to take slightly softer night images vs the red glowing ones. In my experience, animals don't really care if there's some red glow.