Read This Before You Buy A Baby Monitor: Part 2 of 3


by Rebecca - Date: 2007-09-21 - Word Count: 399 Share This!

Learn 7 hot tips You Should Know so you can RELAX

Continued, Part 2 of 3


3. Does the baby monitor have NIGHT VISION?

To be able to operate in the dark or in low light conditions your baby monitor will need night vision capability. Generally baby monitors with night vision use infra-red LED (Light Emitting Diode) lights to illuminate the camera's field of vision. It is perfectly safe. Infra red is basically the same technology your TV or DVD remotes use.

Generally the more LED lights the baby monitor camera has, the better the night vision and therefore the clearer the images.

Keep a watch over your children and property even in the dark, with live sound and vision streaming to the monitor. Know who is at the door and what that strange noise was outside.

4. Know your frequency: Avoid Interference

A baby monitor works like a radio, transmitting and receiving radio signals through the air on a specific frequency. If your baby monitor uses a common frequency such as 49MHz, you may experience annoying static or interference from devices such as mobile (cell) phones, cordless phones, microwaves and CB radios.

Your signal may even be picked up by a neighbour, or passing truck driver or police car who can overhear your private conversations. You might start receiving someone else's telephone conversation over your baby monitor or hear another baby's cries.

Using a baby monitor with a frequency range of 900MHz or 250GHz baby monitor will minimize such interferences and maintain privacy from other receivers. The 250GHz baby monitors offer the clearest sound & / or picture with the most resistance to static.
Unfortunately all frequencies will be interrupted by barriers in the field of transmission. This means that if there are solid walls or floors between your baby monitor base and the receiver, such as brickwork, blockwork or concrete walls or floor slabs, the clarity will be affected. The good news is that your baby monitor will still work and framed partition walls should not pose a problem.

Some baby monitors offer multiple channels for increased clarity, avoiding possible interference depending on where you are located.

To read the next TOP TIPS go to www.thebabymonitorshop.com

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