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Perimeter Guardian Night-Vision Bullet Security Camera - Black

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11.02


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Midnight Perimeter Bullet Security Camera - Black Metal

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This isn’t a toy dome cam, it’s a 600TVL bullet built for real work. The Midnight Perimeter Bullet Security Camera runs a 1/3" Sharp CCD with a 3.6 mm lens for honest, usable coverage, day or night. Twenty‑four IR LEDs punch out to about 65 feet with 0 lux performance when the infrared kicks in. Metal weatherproof housing, NTSC signal, BNC video, 12V DC power, ceiling or wall mount. If you care more about reliable perimeter eyes than marketing buzzwords, this is the right tool.

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Midnight Perimeter Bullet Security Camera - Built Like Real Gear

Look at this 600TVL bullet and you know exactly what it’s for: keeping eyes on a perimeter without drama. Metal housing, exposed IR ring, proper mount. This is the kind of small-format CCTV camera installers keep buying because it just works. If you’re used to automatic knife action talk – tolerances, repeatability, reliability – the same mindset applies here. This is surveillance hardware chosen for function, not flash.

Bullet Security Camera for Sale with Honest 600TVL Performance

Resolution in this world isn’t about spec-sheet bragging; it’s about usable image. A true 600 TV lines bullet camera with a 1/3" Sharp CCD is the analog workhorse equivalent of a good mid-tier steel – not exotic, but proven. The 3.6 mm fixed lens gives you a wide, practical field of view for entrances, driveways, loading bays, or interior corridors. You’re not endlessly fiddling with zoom; you set it and it covers the area you actually care about.

Mounted correctly, this bullet camera delivers clean, consistent footage that a DVR can compress without turning everything into mush. It’s the difference between being able to tell what happened at the edge of the frame versus guessing. Installers notice that in the same way a knife collector notices grind symmetry and lockup.

Night Vision That Actually Reaches the Distance

Plenty of cheap cameras promise “night vision” and then fall apart as soon as the sun drops. This bullet housing carries 24 infrared LEDs arranged in a ring around the lens, pushing IR illumination out to about 65 feet under typical conditions. Minimum light is effectively 0 lux once IR is active – in plain terms, total darkness isn’t a problem.

24-LED IR Array for Real 0 Lux Coverage

The LED ring geometry matters. With 24 emitters around the optic, you get a relatively uniform IR wash instead of a hot spot in the middle and useless dark corners. That means faces and plate-sized details stay visible across more of the frame. When your DVR flips to black-and-white, this bullet keeps feeding it an image that’s actually usable, not just technically “on.”

For back doors, small parking lots, side alleys, or warehouse interiors, that 65-foot IR spec lines up with how these spaces are usually laid out. It’s the CCTV equivalent of tuning an automatic knife for the way people really deploy it, not for a spec sheet stunt.

Weatherproof Bullet Housing that Survives Real Install Conditions

Outdoor cameras fail from weather and cheap housings long before they fail from electronics. This unit uses a black metal bullet shell with an integrated sunshade over the lens, built to stay out in the weather without constant babysitting. Rated weatherproof and spec’d for operation from about -5°F up to 120°F, it’s made for actual exterior use – not just sheltered soffits in mild climates.

Mounting and Connectors Built for Installers

The adjustable elbow-style arm and round base let you ceiling or wall mount, then fine-tune your angle without fighting the hardware. Once locked down, it stays put. Video output is BNC – the standard connector in serious CCTV installs – and power comes in via a 12V DC RCA-style plug. That means it drops directly into existing analog setups without adapter gymnastics.

If you’ve ever had to hang off a ladder with a drill in one hand and a flimsy, plastic camera in the other, you’ll appreciate that this one feels like gear, not a toy. It’s the same satisfaction as snapping open a well-built automatic knife and feeling the action lock home without play.

Why This Bullet Camera Belongs in a Serious Security Setup

The real appeal here is balance. You’re getting a 600TVL Sharp CCD sensor, 3.6 mm lens, metal weatherproof body, and credible 0-lux IR performance out to around 65 feet. No gimmicks, no app-of-the-month dependencies, just a solid analog camera that feeds your recorder a steady, predictable signal in NTSC format.

For homeowners who want a visible deterrent on the eaves, small business owners watching a storefront or stockroom, and installers filling out a multi-camera system, this hits the sweet spot: rugged enough to live outside, compact enough to stay unobtrusive, and straightforward enough that you’re not chasing firmware updates just to get a picture.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing a Security Camera

Are these bullet security cameras weatherproof?

Yes. This bullet camera is built with a weatherproof metal housing and an operating range from roughly -5°F to 120°F. That makes it appropriate for most outdoor residential and light commercial applications, assuming you mount it correctly and follow basic install best practices. Think of it like any serious piece of outdoor equipment: respect the seals, don’t bury the connectors in standing water, and it will keep doing its job season after season.

What’s the difference between a bullet camera and a dome camera?

A bullet camera like this one uses a cylindrical housing with a directional mount. You always have a clear sense of where it’s pointed, and you can aim it easily at a gate, door, or specific lane. Domes are lower profile and often vandal-resistant, but they’re not as obvious as deterrents and can be a little more finicky to service. Installers lean on bullets when they want quick orientation, visible presence, and simpler exterior mounting with good weather shedding.

How does this camera perform at night compared to cheaper options?

The combination of a Sharp 1/3" CCD and a 24-LED IR ring is what separates it from the bottom-tier stuff. Cheaper units often exaggerate IR range or use weaker sensors that turn low-light footage into muddy noise. Here, the CCD stays relatively clean under IR, and the 0-lux spec with IR on actually means the camera sees in genuine darkness, not just dim twilight. If you care whether you can identify someone at the far end of a driveway at 2 a.m., that difference matters.

What makes this bullet camera worth buying?

It earns its keep by being predictable. You get consistent 600TVL analog resolution, honest IR coverage out to about 65 feet, a metal, weatherproof shell that won’t crumble after a few seasons, and hardware that mounts cleanly on a ceiling or wall. It plays well with standard NTSC DVRs over BNC, powers off the common 12V DC rail, and doesn’t demand complex config wizardry to deliver a good image. In other words, it does its job with the same quiet competence you expect from any tool you trust daily.

Choose Gear that Works as Hard as You Do

Collectors and professionals in any equipment-heavy world know the feeling: you reach for the piece that’s proven itself. This Midnight Perimeter Bullet Security Camera is exactly that sort of choice. No pretense, no inflated claims – just a solid, weatherproof 600TVL bullet that shows you what’s happening, day or night, without complaining. If you build your setups the way a serious enthusiast builds a carry rotation – on reliability, not hype – this belongs in your system.

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