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Dealer Pricing Available

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FMI DIGITAL BUS VIDEO SYSTEMS

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The worlds most precious cargo deserves the most dependable digital bus video system available
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Best Selling USA Made School Bus
Solid State CF, 2-Channel, GPS, DVR
With Free On Screen Mapping

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Your Choice of Cameras at the same price:
White Turret Cameras, VR, IR LEDs, Built in microphone,
Police Tough Hi-resolution VR, IR LEDs, Built in microphone
Both are color, vandal resistant, with Night Vision
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"EXTREME SERIES" 100% SOLID STATE
DIGITAL BUS VIDEO
FMI-CF DIGITAL BUS VIDEO SYSTEMS
This Mobile Digital Video Recorder is designed specifically for mobile applications where archiving of the data off of the vehicle is critical and reliability in harsh environments is critical. The FMI-CF Mobile MDVR has no moving parts resulting in a solid, reliable, and the most dependable digital recorder on the market today. When it comes to tough durable and long lasting data storage it is hard to beat the 100% Solid State digital storage of the CF card based systems. CF cards can withstand 50Gs of shock during operation, without damage, while a standard hard drive can only handle a couple Gs during operation before it crashes, making the CF card based system up to 25 times tougher than some hard drive based systems. CF cards can be frozen solid, slammed with 50 Gs of shock, and have no moving parts to wear out. It is a fact the CF card is far superior to the hard drive in virtually every area, except price and capacity, and with the release of the 32GB CF card at a very reasonable price, it seems the hard drives days are numbered. CF Systems and DVRs DO NOT come with the CF card. We offer them as an option on quotes but schools can also provide their own from GSA vendors.
*Note: Free On Screen Mapping feature requires program access to the Internet for Google provided map & zoom features. This feature is disabled if Internet access not permitted.
Rear view of the FMI-CF DVR showing the "Industry standard" power and camera connections that for more than a decade were offered on the most common VCR based bus video systems. This is what makes this system the #1 choice for "VCR to digital conversions

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- 100% Solid State Digital Video System with no Hard Drive to crash
- Dual Channel DVRs available
- Vandal resistant Infra-Red cameras
- Cameras are adjustable to your needs wherever you want them
- Unmatched Data Reliability in Digital Bus Video from CF based data storage
- Free Reader units
- CF Card Warranty can last the life of the bus at No Additional Charge
- CF cards available at low cost
- 10B-T Ethernet web browser interface
- GPS version has built in speed and On Screen mapping during playback
Technical Specifications
* Integrated GPS position, speed tracking and recording.
* Recording of the GPS speed and position attached to a video frame.
* Recording to Compact Flash Card media for unmatched reliability.
* Selectable record resolution: 640 x 240 or 320 x 240.
* Standard MJPEG compression with user selectable video compression rate and frame rate.
* Two video input ports supports 2 cameras (FMI-CF2)
* Dual audio input.
* Both channels simultaneously recorded.
* Independent 12V audio event trigger to start recording.
* 12V power supply output for the audio subsystem.
* 12V tolerant seven channel multi-event trigger recording and system control.
* Triggers can control record start, record stop, and camera selection.
* Triggers can record an event label attached to a video frame.
* Configurable event labels.
* 10B-T Ethernet port for web browser interface.
* Two 12 Volt camera or accessory power supplies.
* Mobile power supply protection to allow direct connection to a vehicles 12V power supply.
* Embedded Operating System for unmatched reliability, security and fast power up.
* Video authentication support via the Graphical User Interface (GUI).
* Selectable pre-event recording time up to 60 seconds.
* RS232 Radar interface data support.
* Simple VCR-type button controls. (Can be locked out)
*Rugged Aluminum Extrusion construction designed for standard 1 DIN automotive installation.
All specifications and features listed subject to change by the manufacturer without notice.
Estimated CF card record times with 32GB Cf card:, picture resolution on "Medium" with 2 cameras:
(About 2 times longer for single camera)
- 5 fps =36 hours
- 7.5 fps = 24 hours
- 10 fps = 18 hours
- 20 fps = 9 hours
- 30fps = 6 hours
| FMI-CF |
Drop-in-VCR-Conversion |
$665 |
| FMI-CF-1 |
1-Channel DVR System w/ 1 camera |
$850 |
| FMI-CF2-1 |
2-Channel DVR System w/ 1 camera |
$1,150 |
| FMI-CF2-2 |
2-Channel DVR System w/ 2 cameras |
$1,300 |
| GPS |
GPS upgrade w/ On screen Mapping |
$200 |
| 8-GB-CF |
8 Gig CF card High Speed Transfer |
$80 |
| 16-GB-CF |
16 Gig CF card High Speed Transfer |
$130 |
| 32-GB-CF |
32 Gig CF card High Speed Transfer |
$250 |
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E-mail quantities for detailed quote
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THE FUTURE OF BUS VIDEO IS "SOLID STATE DRIVE"

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The mobile digital data market is rapidly migrating to 100% Solid State Drive (SSD), in order to achieve the highest levels of data integrity, reliability and durability inherent in the Solid State Drive flash memory devices (CF cards & RAM drives).
It is reasonable to surmise as Solid State Drive (SSD) memory capacity increases and cost decreases they will soon replace the fragile hard drives of the digital bus video systems and offer the school districts a system capable of outlasting the expected 20 year bus life.
Within the next 5 years we will see the sun set on hard drive technology in digital bus video systems, and a new dawn of 100% Solid State Drive (SSD) will provide the school bus video market the extreme durability and uncompromising data integrity those districts deserve for their tax dollars. When that sun sets on hard drives and the new dawn brings a sunrise on the Solid State Drives will your district be "in the dark" or "enjoying the sunrise" of true data integrity and reliability?
100% Solid State Drive Memory (SSD)
Hard drive disk failure is a common occurrence in this age of desktop computers but when you move the same technology to a mobile application the incidence of failure and damage to the fragile drive mechanism of a conventional hard drive can increase exponentially.
The frequency of drive failure, crashed drives and lost data are well known in the PC markets. Entire industries and sub markets have arisen to help safeguard business entities from the all too common problems with hard drives offering back up, archival, off site storage and data recovery services.
Risking your districts bus video liability protection to a fragile recording mechanism that could fail when you need it most, does not make sense when the most dependable, 100% Solid State Drive (SSD) is now available.
Once the decision is made to move forward to limit risk and enhance child safety on the bus by investing in a digital bus video system, accept nothing less than a 100% Solid State Drive (SSD)
Hard Drive Problems & Life Span
The main problem with hard drives is they are fragile mechanical mechanism with moving parts susceptible to wear and tear. Even under the best of circumstances within an ideal operation environment of an air conditioned office, they are wearing themselves out over time simply from normal wear and tear on the moving recording mechanism each time it is turned on, and required to read from the disk or write to the disk.
HDDs mechanism will deteriorate over time. HDDs consist of rotating, magnetically coated disks, known as platters, which are used to store data. This rotating motion of the mechanical arms results in considerable wear and tear after long periods of use. The operational life span of a computer HDD is typically over three years under controlled conditions, but your bus lifespan can be up to 20 years and it does not spend that time sitting still in an air conditioned office.
No matter how much cushioning a manufacturer provides the conventional hard drive, no matter how buffered the case is from shock and vibration, none of that addresses the primary flaw in the design of the system; that the unit begins wearing out the day it is first turned on and with each hour of video it records it gets that much closer to failure due to natural wear and tear.
100% Solid State Drive (SSD) Life Span
CF Compact Flash-based SSD are uniquely suited for mobile applications like school buses. They have no moving parts to wear out, no fragile mechanism to be damaged by pot holes, hitting curbs, impacting other vehicles plus their temperature operating range far exceeds what conventional PC hard drives.
CF Compact Flash cards are rated at around 300,000 write cycles, the best Flash chips are rated at 1,000,000 write cycles per block. This is the only rating I can find to determine the expected life of the CF card.
As the only measure I can find for expected life of a SSD is Write Cycles, if you multiple the number of days a year most buses operate (180) by the number of trips per day (2) you will get an average trips per year of 360, then double that for good measure and you have 720 trips per year per bus on average. Divide the expected life (write cycles) 300,000 by the number of trips expected each year and you get about 4,166 years worth of write cycles. This is not meant to imply they will work that long, but it does seem to indicate the are capable of lasting the life of the bus or longer. This 100% Solid State Disk (SDD) is the only memory device I am aware of that seems capable of lasting the life of the bus in a digital bus video application.
Hidden Costs Of Hard Drives
The trade off of massive storage capacity in a hard drive, is a poor substitute for dependable data integrity when everything that can go wrong in the mobile video environment is calculated into the equation.
Assuming your bus lasts 20 years, it could require up to 6 hard drive replacements over the life of the bus costing your district to bleed budget funds far into the future. This 3 year life expectancy of the hard drives is based on the longest warranty coverage of a hard drive by the manufacturer of a bus video system I am aware of, currently at 3 years. The fact they will warranty its function for 3 years leads one to believe it will last 3 years.
Given this same deductive reasoning of the expected life of the drive, many CF Flash cards manufacturers (CF Flash cards are 100% Solid State Drives SDD) offer Limited lifetime warranties based on their belief that with no moving parts and extreme durability the CF flash cards (SSD) will outlast their user. For the first time in school bus video, the system memory storage is capable of outlasting the bus life of 20 years of daily use.
Reliability
In terms of reliability, the conventional HDDs pale when compared to SSDs. The absence of mechanical arms and spinning platters to wear out or crash is the reason behind its reliability. In demanding environments, SSDs provide the type of ruggedness required for mobile applications. Unlike the HDD, SSD's can withstand extreme shock and vibration with data integrity and without any danger of data loss.
This feature is very important in school bus applications as there may come a time when the district is facing a $40,000,000.00 liability lawsuit resulting from a school bus related incident and the only thing standing between your district and a damaging court ruling or costly damages settlement may be the bus video system you invested in to protect yourself from this very situation.
That is not the time to remember reading about the extreme durability and dependability of a SSD based system while you try to explain why you chose the fragile hard drive based system that failed, because it offered more storage capacity or saved a few bucks.
The US Armed Forces are the best equipped fighting force in history. They demand the highest quality standards from their equipment and set extreme specifications that can survive the most abuse, in every extreme environment and situation they can anticipate.
The SSDs ability to deliver unnerving performance in extreme conditions also makes SSD play a vital role in military operations, be it in defense, aerospace or aviation applications. Military applications require, in most cases, an operating temperature range of -60°C to +95°C (Fahrenheit -76 to +194).
Heat Dissipation
Along with the lower power consumption, there is also much lesser heat dissipation for systems using Flash-based SSDs as their data storage solution. This is due to the absence of heat generated from the rotating/disk and mechanism. This proves to be the one of the main advantages of Flash-based SSDs relative to that of a traditional HDD. With less heat dissipation, it serves as the ideal data storage solution for mobile bus video systems along with PDAs, notebooks, etc. Users can do away with large cooling fans, internal power supply and batteries for large storage arrays in storage area networks.
Bus video systems with SSD memory do not need cooling fans or heaters.
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Spec American DVRs
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Buy American DVRs
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The worlds most precious cargo deserves the most dependable digital bus video system available
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Best Value USA Made School Bus Video
2-Channel DVR w/dual HDD tray, FTP
Server, GPS & Free On Screen Mapping

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Your Choice of Cameras at the same price:
White Turret Cameras, VR, IR LEDs, Built in microphone, Police Tough Hi-resolution VR, IR LEDs, Built in microphone
Both are Color, Vandal Resistant, with Night Vision
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"FMI-HD" DIGITAL BUS VIDEO SYSTEMS
The FMI-HD is a basic 2 channel mobile digital system designed as the most versatile and rugged mobile video recorder on the market. This small and compact unit is designed to store from weeks to months worth of data on the vehicle while allowing archiving of the data by removing the hard drive or the transfer of the data to a server via wired or wireless connection. This recorder is designed specifically for mobile applications in harsh temperature and high-vibration environments where reliability of the recorded data is critical. It features a lockable removable rugged 2.5 mobile hard drive with flash based operating system for unsurpassed reliability.
*Note: Free On Screen Mapping feature requires program access to the Internet for Google provided map & zoom features. This feature is disabled if Internet access not permitted.
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Rear view of the FMI-HD DVR showing the "Industry standard" power and camera connections that for more than a decade were offered on the most common VCR based bus video systems. This is what makes this system the #1 choice for "VCR to digital conversions

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Features Include:
- Full digital 2- audio/video channel recording
- Removable Hard Drive 80GB for 80+ hours
- Multiple trigger inputs / outputs
- 2.5 mobile rated removable hard drive.
- Built-in Ethernet port with integrated web-server & FTP
- Backend software to support automatic downloading events
- Backend GUI software to support playback and meta-data
- extraction, single frame snapshots and video authentication.
- Panic button to mark events for easy searching
- Unparalleled search capability 98x fast forward & review.
- GPS ready with position and speed meta-data recording.
- VCR-to-Digital conversion on most brands
- On Screen Mapping available with GPS equipped DVRs
- GPS systems are passive and have no monthly charges
- American Designed & Manufactured
- Recording Capabilities
Dual standard NTSC video camera input up to a total of 30 fps with synchronized audio and meta-data
- Meta-Data Capture Per Frame
Input voltage, unit temperature, 14 character unit name, panic button events, all triggers status and names, operating mode & version numbers, time & date, optional GPS lat/long/speed
- Compression:
Motion JPEG compression w/ 5 selectable compression ratios
- Resolution:
Dual camera 320 x 240 or single 640 x 240 square pixel
- Frame Rate:
Selectable 30 FPS to 1/8 FPS
- Video File Format:
Standard AVI playable in Windows Media Player. (320 x 480 format for dual camera)
- Archive Media Type:
Removable 2.5 mobile rated hard drive from 40GB to 120GB.Record until full or continuous video loop.
- Typical Record Time:
80GB Removable Hard Drive w/ 2 cameras: 80 hrs
- Power Supply Input Rating: Standard automotive power range; 8 - 24 Volts DC
On Power Consumption w/o Cameras: < 270 mA
Off Power Consumption: < 10 mA
- 12V Camera Power Output Max:
12V @ 1 Amp regulated switched power outputs.
- External Trigger inputs:
6 input triggers plus the ignition trigger
- External signal outputs:
1 LED driver, 1 Open Collector output
- Transient Protection:
2,500 Watts for 10ms
- Operating Temperature:
0 C ~ 50 C (-32 F ~ 122 F) ambient temperature
- Operating Vibration:
1G @ 5-500 Hz
- Unit Weight:
1.8kg (4.0 lbs)
- Unit Size:
7 in (178 mm) x 2 in (51 mm) x 8 in (203 mm); 1DIN Mountable
Information in this specification sheet is subject to change without notice.
All rights reserved. Actual performance may vary due to operating conditions.
| FMI-HD |
Drop-in-VCR-Conversion |
$1,100 |
| FMI-HD-1 |
2-Channel DVR System w/ 1 camera |
$1,300 |
| FMI-HD-2 |
2-Channel DVR System w/ 2 camera |
$1,450 |
| GPS |
GPS upgrade w/ On screen Mapping |
$200 |
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E-mail quantities for detailed quote
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Spec American DVRs
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Buy American DVRs
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The worlds most precious cargo deserves the most dependable digital bus video system available
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Best Choice USA Made School Bus Video
Quad-DVR with 4 Cameras, Dual HDD tray, H.264 Architecture & Free On Screen Mapping
Features:
4-channel real time audio & video
Built in GPS speed & Location
Free On Screen Mapping feature during playback
Dual slot HDD tray for double stacked hard drives
Upgradable H.264 compression for massive compession
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Your Choice of Cameras at the same price:
White Turret Cameras, VR, IR LEDs, Built in microphone,
Police Tough Hi-resolution VR, IR LEDs, Built in microphone
Both are color, vandal resistant, with Night Vision
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"FMI-HDP" DIGITAL BUS VIDEO SYSTEMS
The FMI-HDP is a professional 4 channel mobile digital system designed as the most versatile and rugged mobile video recorder on the market. This small and compact unit is designed to store from weeks to months worth of data on the vehicle while allowing archiving of the data by removing the hard drive or the transfer of the data to a server via wired or wireless connection. This recorder is designed specifically for mobile applications in harsh temperature and high-vibration environments where reliability of the recorded data is critical. It features a lockable removable rugged 2.5 mobile hard drive with flash based operating system for unsurpassed reliability.
*Note: Free On Screen Mapping feature requires program access to the Internet for Google provided map & zoom features. This feature is disabled if Internet access not permitted.
Rear view of the "FMI-HDP" or Pro series of mobile based DVRs. Unlike most manufacturers who reliable Asian products, this system was designed, developed and manufactured in the USA

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- Up to 4 standard NTSC video camera inputs
- Selectable resolution: MJPEG D1, VGA, or D1 ; Selectable per camera Records directly to dual 2.5 mobile rated removable hard drive
- Built-in 10/100 Ethernet port
- Unparalleled search capability with up to 90x fast forward & review
- GPS latitude, longitude and speed as well as 3-axis accelerometer on secondary slide-in card
- Synchronization of the units time and date with the GPS satellite system
- Integrated web-server
- 60 second Pre-event recording
- System diagnostics and ability to report these over Ethernet or trigger output
- Time synchronization for multi-unit installations (Ethernet)
- Streaming video capable
- Can be used with removable hard drive of CF card drive system
The FMI-HDP is a professional 4 channel mobile digital system designed as the most versatile and rugged mobile video recorder on the market. This small and compact unit is designed to store from weeks to months worth of data on the vehicle while allowing archiving of the data by removing the hard drive or the transfer of the data to a server via wired or wireless connection. This recorder is designed specifically for mobile applications in harsh temperature and high-vibration environments where reliability of the recorded data is critical. It features a lockable removable rugged 2.5 mobile hard drive with flash based operating system for unsurpassed reliability.
Technical Specifications
- Recording Capabilities
4 standard NTSC video camera input at 720 x 240 resolution each with 60 fields per second each (D1) including synchronized audio and meta-data.
- Meta-Data Capture for Each Frame
Input voltage, unit temperature, 14 character unit name, panic button events, all triggers status and names, operating mode & version numbers, time & date, GPS lat/long/speed, 3-axis accelerometer data
- Compression
MJPEG w/ 32 selectable compression ratios
- Resolution
MJPEG D1, VGA, 1/4 D1 or 1/4 VGA; Selectable per camera
- Frame Rate
Selectable 60 fields per sec to 1/8 fps.
- Video File Format
Standard AVI file encapsulation including all video, audio meta data streams
- Archive Media Type
Dual removable 2.5 IDE mobile rated hard drive from 40GB to 120GB each or 4 SD / SDHC Flash Cards
- Real Time Clock
Battery backup real time clock with DST adjustment GPS time synchronization
- Locked/Secure Design
The unit features password protection with a barrel style removable hard drive lock and SD card lock.
- Power Supply Input Rating
Standard automotive power range; 8 - 24 Volts DC
- Off Power Consumption
< 12 mA
- 12V Camera Power Output
Max Four 12V @ 1/2 Amp regulated switched power outputs for camera supplies
- GPS Features
- L1, 12-channel continuous tracking receiver.
GPS Acquisition
<50 sec (50%), <84 sec (90%)
- GPS Antenna
Compact Magnetic-Mount Antenna with 5-meter length cable.
- External Trigger Inputs
7 input triggers plus the ignition trigger
- External Signal Outputs
2 Open Collector output
- External Interface
RJ-45 10/100 Ethernet, 3 RS-232 Serial Ports
- Operating Temperature
0 C ~ 50 C (32 F ~ 122 F) ambient temperature for Hard Drive; -20 C ~ 60 C for SD Card version
- Operating Vibration
1G @ 5-500 Hz Hard Drive Version
100G shock for the SD Flash Version
- Unit Weight
1.8kg (4.0 lbs.) SD Version
- Unit Size
U7 in (178 mm) x 2 in (51 mm) x 8 in (203 mm)
Information in this specification sheet is subject to change without notice.
All rights reserved. Actual performance may vary due to operating conditions.
FMI-HDP
-1-GPS |
DVR GPS System 1 camera
with Free On Screen Mapping |
$1,875 |
FMI-HDP
-2-GPS |
DVR GPS System 2 camera
with Free On Screen Mapping |
$2,000 |
FMI-HDP
-3-GPS |
DVR GPS System 3 camera
with Free On Screen Mapping |
$2,125 |
FMI-HDP
-4-GPS |
DVR GPS System 4 camera
with Free On Screen Mapping |
$2,250 |
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E-mail quantities for detailed quote
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Spec American DVRs
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Buy American DVRs
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SOME BASICS OF DIGITAL BUS VIDEO SYSTEMS TO BE AWARE OF:
MULTIPLE CAMERAS:
With digital systems you can now get true hi-resolution images from multiple cameras all operating at the same time.
Most professional platform systems will support up to 4 cameras internally multiplexed, meaning they do not have to share the frame rate.
FRAME RATES:
If you see a specification of 30 FPS (frames per second) this is great, until you purchase it and then later find you have 4 cameras sharing 30 FPS, so your state of the art recording system looks more like a 1930's movie camera with stop frame playback!
To prevent this from happening make sure the system has "30 FPS per camera" and they are not sharing the frame rate.
EXTERIOR CAMERAS:
STOP ARM cameras to catch those drivers with the "I will get there on time even if it kills you" attitude, are getting more and more common to catch and document for law enforcement those who violate Stop Arms, flashing light and child safety by passing school busses while they are loading or unloading.
NIGHT VISION CAMERAS:
Camera with night vision capability via Infra Red Illumination LEDs or image intensification are available at the same prices from some manufacturers now to school systems. There are times when the bus may be operated in low light such as early morning, evening or on field trips. Early trips in the winter months are in almost total darkness, so this feature permits limited use when the sunlight is not enough to light up the bus, or if field trips or sports events are taken in this bus, as they are often after sunlight hours.
FREE ON SCREEN MAPPING
FMI currently offers Free On screen Mapping during playback with all their GPS equipped DVRs sold, such as the FMI-CF-GPS, FMI-CF2-GPS, FMI-HD-GPS & FMI-HDP-GPS all of which are priced on our sites. While another first offered this mapping feature it was available via a hardware mechanism that consumed one of your DVRs video channels limiting the 4 channel DVR to 3 cameras only with mapping at a considerable additional cost, FMI is the American manufacturer who deserves recognition for providing this free of charge to all customers of their GPS equipped DVR systems As their path to the same goal was via software not hardware, not only can they deliver this to their GPS customers free of cost, they also do not clog up a video channel with mapping, so their 4 channel DVRs actually record 4 cameras full time even with mapping
*Note: Free On Screen Mapping feature requires program access to the Internet for Google provided map & zoom features. This feature is disabled if Internet access not permitted.
SYSTEM WARRANTY:
2 Year Warranty is now offered on some systems, and this should be a clue to who really stands behind their products. Why get a 1 year product warranty and get screwed for the next year when you can get 2 year DVR protection free?
I am confident all reputable manufacturers will soon adopt this same 2 year DVR warranty, it just might take them some time to see that the customers want this added protection.
All manufacturers who claim to offer your district a quality system should back up their claims of quality with a full 2year DVR warranty on the complete digital system! Get it in writing before you talk any further. Should they balk that this is not needed, tell them that their competition offers a full 2 year DVR warranty, and put it in your bid specs, as only then will reputable manufacturers step up to the plate and do the right thing for their customers.
FREE GPS SPEED & PASSIVE TRACKING:
Free GPS Speed & Passive Tracking Information is available on some systems.
(With the advent of "multiplexed buses" it is now more difficult then ever to attach any electronic device to a new bus without interfering with the bus electronics. The old days of tapping into the speed signal for the bus video systems to display speed are long gone. The best way to provide speed to those who wish to show that in the video record, is via a small GPS antenna kit. This will in no way interfere with any bus function as it is not connected to any bus electrical connection.
PROPRIETARY HARD DRIVES
American school districts have been getting ripped off for years now with this "propriety hard drive" scam from a foreign manufacturer who will remain unnamed. It is time to send a clear message that American school districts have had enough of this raw deal and start exercising our freedom of choice by choosing to spec a system we will not be forced to pay up to 10 times the cost for a hard drive when they fail from some foreign predator. By only accepting a non-propriety IDE hard drive DVR system, your district will never be tied to any product manufacturer for future hard drive replacements.
DIGITAL HARD DRIVE CAPACITY:
I constantly see bid specs listing 40 Gig Hard drives...and they say Vaudeville is dead? I am just wondering how long foreign manufacturers are going to dump outdated products by selling to American school districts? This is really nuts, my children play music on their iPODs and iPODs have larger drives than that in them. They are offering a hi-tech digital security product designed and used for litigation protection and evidence documentation and they choose a hard drive smaller than a children toy....just priceless! Less than 80 Gig hard drive is not acceptable
PANIC BUTTON:
Event / Panic button or marker or driver input terminal with event lock is a good idea.
(Unlike a VCR, a digital system can hold several months of data in it. If an important event is not "marked" it is not only possible it will eventually be recorded over, but that event may be really hard to find in hundreds of hours of video in the hard drive. When an incident occurs, the driver is to press the event marker or event button. This locks in time 5 minutes in the past to show what started the event, and 5 minutes in the future to show how it was resolved. This is the most important aspect of data marking for digital systems.)
LAPTOP HARD DRIVES ONLY:
"2.5" Shock Mounted" Laptop hard drive, providing the most durable shock resistant DVR possible is a good way to insure you are not spending money on hard drives when the large ones crash. You see the drives in your desktop PC are larger, but much more fragile. 3.5" hard drives built for PCs, are dirt cheap and can crash in mobile applications, that is why lap tops use 2.5" hard drives, the toughest lap tops in the market now use "Shock Mounted" hard drives to protect valuable data, and nothing is more valuable than video evidence in the event of a crime on your bus.
INSTALLATION
The digital bus video manufacturers "Factory Authorized" distributor service team will complete all installations (should the school systems mechanics not do the work themselves), 3rd party contractors in the past have made some very expensive mistakes and we continue to be contracted to clean up their messes by customers after the fact. (Anyone can visit the photo galleries on this site to see the reckless, thoughtless, incompetence, sheer stupidity and damage done to customer equipment and buses themselves when a non involved person is paid peanuts to install a highly sophisticated, valuable and delicate system of recording instruments in the bus. The cost of installation is a direct representation of the installers skill level and experience. This is one area "Low Bid" can be a costly mistake.
STORAGE CAPACITY & IMAGE QUALITY:
There is a inverse relationship between storage and resolution of images. The longer the system will store the images before recording over then, the poorer the image quality will be with other factors remaining constant.
This means that the salesman pushing his 6-month+ storage ability feature on you, is likely to be pushing the poorest quality images you can get, as it is a simple trade off. It is possible to make image files so small and compressed, manufacturers can now store 3-18 months on a recorder before it starts to rerecord over older images. This sounds good at first, until you see the image quality, or worse yet try to zoom in on a portion of the image to see if the child in question is holding a knife or foil wrapped stick of gum. I see no use advantage in storing several months of image files that are so small and so poor in quality they are in most cases useless. I have been advocating the industry offer high-resolution images of sufficient quality that the "zoom in" and photo manipulability these systems offer, are of some use. After several years, it would seem someone is listening for the requests for better image quality. The new SV & FMI digital systems will offer much higher resolution images than all past product offerings. This will be a great improvement as now many of the advanced features of the true digital system will be usable as they were intended.
Should you have questions, suggestions, wish to receive literature feel free to E-mail, or call.
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Top Mistakes Buying School Bus Video Cameras

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1 - Buying a Fragile Hard Drive Based Bus Video system
Typical hard drives are designed for use under office conditions, meaning close to ideal conditions with low temperatures, low humidity, conditioned electrical source and no sudden movements. Now that the VCR has gone the way of the Dodo bird, the DVR hard drive now takes the position of arguably the most fragile device or mechanism in the school bus.
Think to yourself of every time you have heard of a hard drive problem, a hard drive crash from a friend or business college. Chances are those hard drives problems or hard drive crashes occurred while they were working on the PCs in a business office environment. Some may have been sitting still on a desktop or sitting safely under a desk and simply wore out or failed due to non-environmental affects.
They are fragile mechanical devices that we trust to defend our school districts when in the worst possible scenarios events occur that require their use as a expert witness, often in court.
When you are purchasing a video system to protect your district from liability and act as an expert witness in the worst case scenarios, it seems a wise idea to make sure the one you invest district budget dollars into will not fail you when you need it most. This is the type of decision that separates those of vision from those who might look back in hindsight after losing the lawsuit due to a failed hard drive system that was damaged in the crash.
Ask your IT department staff how many hard drives they have ever replaced from a fixed location in a controlled stabile environment. It has been my experience in a harsh mobile environment like a bus; the incidence of failure and problems will be geometrically higher. I have replaced far more hard drive based DVRs that I care to remember both under and out of warranty and the costs were considerable.
Most of us have several forms of solid state drive devices we use every day, in different locations we travel, in every environment and under conditions that would damage the average hard drive in about a week. That would be our cell phones, our MP3 players or IPods, GPS NAV systems, beepers or our Blackberries. With all the abuse we provide them the recording mechanism has no moving parts to wear out or break, so they are well suited for the mobile environment.
The only digital system I am aware of with any chance of exceeding the life of the average school bus is the solid-state drive based DVR. With children's lives in your care and million dollar lawsuits on the line when something goes wrong, can you really afford to have anything less than 100% solid-state drive?
2 - Choosing Old GPS Technology Versus On Screen Mapping
In the past GPS was employed in bus video systems as a way to document the bus speed on the playback as several bus manufacturers had changed their wiring to multiplexed wiring or simply made it bothersome to tap into the speed signal.
Currently there are two methods to offer an improved GPS feature we call On Screen Mapping. Like the Introduction to Business 101 example of IBM versus Bill Gates, one manufacturer has chosen to go the way of IBM who pursued the hardware based solutions, while Bill Gates blazed the software solutions. A reseller of Republic of China DVRs was the first to offer On Screen Mapping, as I know it, a new technology application that deserves mention. Unfortunately like IBM this new feature was hardware driven through the incorporation of a large expensive mechanical solution that consumed one of the DVRs video channels. This meant the 4-channel DVR was only capable of recording 3 cameras when it had this mapping feature.
However it was American DVR manufacturers who deserve recognition for taking notes in business school and learning the genius of Bill Gates software provided solutions over hardware provided solutions providing this On Screen Mapping free of charge to all customers of their GPS equipped DVR systems.
As their path to the same goal was via software not hardware like the most successful PC Software maker in history, not only can they deliver this to their GPS customers free of cost, they also do not require a large and expensive mechanical device that can consume a valuable video channel with mapping, so their 4 channel DVRs actually record 4 cameras full time even with mapping. This could insure their customers 4 full time cameras and on screen mapping long after the hardware based solution has been forgotten.
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This system can document or disprove parent claims that
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The bus was too early and my child missed it.
The bus was too late, and my child missed it.
The bus did not stop at our stop,
My child got on the bus at school, but never got off.
The bus was speeding past our house
These parent concerns can now be verified or proven false with On Screen Mapping |
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This system can also document driver actions & performance such as
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