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AVKANS 30X NDI PTZ Camera Kits - 1pcs 30X AI Auto Tracking NDI Camera with 1pcs IP Joystick Controller Package for Church Live Streaming Video Production(1x AV-CM30-NDI and 1x AV-Joy-IP)

  • Based on 131 reviews
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Availability: Only 2 left in stock, order soon!
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Friday, Sep 27
Order within 11 hours and 29 minutes
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Color: 1pcs 30X NDI camera + 1pcs Joystick(AI Tracking)


Features

  • AVKANS NDI PTZ Camera Package includes 1 pcs 30X NDI PTZ Cameras and 1 pcs Super IP Joystick Controller. Official 30X Auto tracking NDI Camera bundel for Church Live streaming and Worship, Live Event, School, Brocasting and other video recording and streaming.
  • AVKANS 30X NDI PTZ Camera with HDMI SDI IP Video Outputs, Studio Image Quality up to 1080P 60fps. Brocasting rates support as well.
  • NDI Camera PTZ Joystick Controller, easy to use and set it up. With one ethernet cable connecting to network, you can control up to 255 units cameras.
  • Official NDI Camera verified by Newtek Company. Better integration with NDI software and NDI hardware.
  • 30 Day Money Back Guarantee, no risk to purchase. 1st class customer services to assist you to set up/use this cameras.

Brand: AVKANS


Video Capture Resolution: 1080p


Flash Memory Type: Micro SD


Video Capture Format: MPEG 4


Screen Size: 2 Inches


Connectivity Technology: Wired


Color: 1pcs 30X NDI camera + 1pcs Joystick(AI Tracking)


Special Feature: Auto Tracking Feature, NDI, POE


Model Name: AV-CM30-NDI


Included Components: Camera Body, Joystick


Package Dimensions: 16.85 x 13.39 x 10.51 inches


Item Weight: 12.03 pounds


Date First Available: October 28, 2022


Manufacturer: AVKANS


Country of Origin: China


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Friday, Sep 27

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Excellent PTZ camera with great zoom!
Color: 30X NDI Camera(with AI Auto Tracking)
I'm a big fan of this camera for it's zoom capability, vivid colors and NDI functionality. I use it for recording live events and I have had zero problems with the camera. It responds quickly when paired with the Avkans Joystick Controller and has no delay when using NDI over the network. It is also very reasonably priced for what it offers. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 22, 2024 by Jeremy Odom

  • Great optics, easy to use, wonderful customer service.
Color: 30X NDI Camera(with AI Auto Tracking)
We purchased this camera from AVKANS almost a year ago. It was easy to setup and use right out of the box. When we had to get NDI setup Jenny was great and efficient at getting it done. We use it in Worship to live stream and mix graphics and words into it from our lyric software. The 30x zoom and ptz functions are smooth and fun to use. It was among the best prices I could find for similar features ptz cameras. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 13, 2023 by Shawn hobson

  • An excellent alternative to the more expensive brands of the same quality
Color: 30X NDI Camera(with AI Auto Tracking)
I was in the market for at least 2 PTZ, NDI cameras that we could use with vMix to stream our Sunday church service. I did quite a but of research to see what was available and at what price, since my budget was quite low. Naturally I looked at the PTZ Optics and similar brands but they were out of my reach. I stumbled upon this camera and after reading what was available, I decided to buy 1 camera to tryout before buying a second one. Now I'm not one to give a quick review either for or against a product before I have actually tested it properly. Nor am I one to give 5 stars unless I'm completely satisfied and can find no fault in the product, for what I was expecting it to do. Furthermore, I have had my colleagues at the church operate the camera and listened to their feedback. After running the camera for 5 services lasting more than 2 hours each time, I can say that the camera performed flawlessly. The default picture quality of 1920x1080 @60fps is crisp and sharp, so we have been using that. There is no sound from the camera motors when it moves. We are connected via NDI to the vMix laptop and this works well. Point to note is that we are not using the built-in vMix PTZ controls nor are we using the controls from the camera's web interface. Surprisingly, PTZ Optics has a free utility on their website for controlling PTZ cameras and this is more powerful and flexible than either vMix or the native camera controls. This utility can control up to 8 PTZ cameras simultaneously and this is working well. After seeing how well the utility worked I decided to have a deeper look at the PTZ Optics camera interface. Lo and behold, it is exactly the same as this AVKANS camera. I'm almost tempted to say its a PTZ Optics camera in disguise. So I have tested and used the NDI link and the direct HDMI link and they both work well. I have tested the PoE link and it works fine, however we don't use it since there is a power source near to where the camera is located. I have not tested the RS232 functionality. My final thought is that I would certainly recommend this camera and will definitely move ahead with buying 2 more. For the price and camera functionality, its certainly worth it. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on June 14, 2021 by BigRob

  • Great Value in these PTZ Cameras!
Color: 30X NDI Camera(with AI Auto Tracking)
I have been using the Avkans PTZ cameras for about 3 years now. I purchased them to upgrade the presentation of livestreaming for a few churches. The build of the cameras are very sturdy and quality. The comparable use is to that of PTZOptics and no desired features are missing. One of my favorite features of this camera is it's ability to operate in low light environments very well! I have purchased both SDI only and NDI versions. I was very surprised to learn I could upgrade my SDI version to include the NDI feature! I contacted support and they assisted right away with great communication! I recommend this camera to all looking to upgrade their livestream quality with multiple angles and control! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 13, 2024 by WwArEiV

  • Decent video quality indoors, massively blown highlights outside (no exposure comp.)
Color: 30X NDI Camera(with AI Auto Tracking)
I bought this camera to use for various outdoor and indoor video shoots for a musical performing group. I was able to (barely) get by with it for the first event, but there were enough video quality problems using it outdoors that I'm going to return it. For use in indoor environments, this camera certainly seems usable to me, so I would have no trouble recommending it for someone who wants a basic PTZ camera for a conference room or whatever. In the process of testing this thing out, I've written large amounts of custom software to throw commands at the device, enabling me to see exactly what does and doesn't work. I'm providing this detailed review for anyone who cares about using this for semi-pro live streaming purposes, which tends to have much steeper requirements than, for example, a conference room camera. I hope this detailed review is helpful for folks when deciding whether the camera's limitations are something you can work with, and I hope the manufacturer addresses the firmware limitations I've encountered in the near future. Indoor video quality: Video quality seems comparable to other cameras on the market, and having a 30x zoom is, of course, great. It's the difference between being able to put a camera at the back of a church and having to put it smack in the middle (though I do wish that the NDI camera manufacturers would include screw threads so you could put teleconverters on them for reach applications). Outdoor video quality: This camera seems to get the exposure badly wrong outdoors when you have a wide contrast ratio (e.g. brightly lit people in the foreground, but shadowed trees in the background), resulting in massively blown highlights. I did not experience this with other NDI cameras (NewTek, Marshall) in the same position, so this should be considered a bug in and of itself. (For that shoot, I was able to swap it with a different camera and put it in a spot where the lighting wasn't so challenging.) Unfortunately, unlike most other cameras on the market, this camera does not provide any web-based control over exposure. This firmware limitation really needs to be fixed ASAP, because unless you're using the camera in a conference room, you'll probably eventually run into a situation where you really need exposure compensation. That said, in most indoor environments, it shouldn't be a problem, because the camera *does* have backlight compensation (brightening the highlights further), which is available from the remote and the web UI, IIRC. It is possible to partially work around this limitation with the right external hardware or software. Specifically, this camera supports full manual control over the shutter speed, iris, and gain. You can control that with VISCA-over-IP with the right software. I have not tested the NDI exposure adjustment APIs to see if they work. It's worth noting, however, that neither NewTek's video monitor app nor Sienna's similar app supports any exposure control whatsoever, so the answer to that question is mostly academic. The biggest disappointment here was that the camera does *not* appear to support exposure compensation, even over VISCA — only full manual control. (Nothing happens when I send the exposure compensation set command; I've tested the same code on Marshall's 4K cameras, and it works, so I'm reasonably certain that this is an actual firmware limitation.) Unfortunately, the lack of exposure compensation makes it challenging to deal with this camera for what I was planning to use the camera for. Position recall: Like all NDI PTZ cameras, it fully supports storing pan/tilt/zoom locations for near-instant recall. If you have multiple cameras, you may find yourself using this frequently. The motion is fast, so you'd never want to have it move on its own while the camera is live, but the feature makes it easy to point the camera at a known location while you're streaming video from a different camera (or other source). PTZ control: Over NDI, pan and tilt work as expected, but zoom control is a single speed (fast). Again, this is a common bug in a lot of these cameras; the same bug exists on cameras by NewTek and Marshall. The workaround is to control the cameras using VISCA-over-IP. VISCA-over-IP behavior: This camera supports two different VISCA-over-IP modes: TCP-based control on port 5678 and UDP-based control on port 52381. That last one was hard to discover; it's not the port that PTZOptics uses (1259), and the protocol for UDP on that port requires somewhat different data than the TCP port does, or else weird stuff happens. I ended up finding out about the protocol differences by reading a document from Marshall about their IP cameras (very different hardware, but apparently similar firmware). With this mode, the camera supports... probably eight zoom speeds, though my limited testing so far couldn't confirm that all of the speeds are actually different; there are at least four distinct speeds, and probably eight. In other words, always use VISCA-over-UDP with this camera, at least in the current version of the firmware. Note that this problem is not unique to this camera. I've seen the same bug with 4K30 cameras from Marshall and 4K60 cameras from NewTek. In other words, I'm pretty sure the problems I'm having are probably in the NDI SDK itself (or perhaps in their sample code). Besides the zoom speed bugs, there's one other bug I ran into. When a client disconnects suddenly and tries to reconnect, this camera can freeze, requiring you to power-cycle the camera. This bug also exists on older firmware revisions from NewTek (I have not seen this in v.105), and on current firmware from Marshall; this seems to be a really common firmware bug. As long as your network is robust, you're probably okay, but you should be aware of this bug. If the camera stops providing video, power-cycle it. (This is where PoE can come in handy.) The manufacturer has assured me that they'll take a look and try to figure out what's going on, as has the NDI SDK team. I could fairly reliably (accidentally) reproduce the failure as follows: 1. Open an NDI connection to the camera. 2. Disconnect the network for a while (no idea how long — maybe a minute or two). 3. Reconnect the network. 4. Try to reestablish the connection. Or instead of waiting, reboot the computer. That has the same effect. While in the crashed state, the camera responds to low-level network traffic (DNS service discovery), so NDI apps can see the camera, but you can't get video or audio packets from the camera. PTZ control is also nonfunctional, whether over the NDI protocol or VISCA-over-TCP (didn't try VISCA-over-UDP). In short, some critical process in the camera likely crashed or froze and never came back or got restarted. One other thing to be aware of is that the SDI connection sticks out a long way. I've seen this on some other SDI gear as well, so this isn't unusual for SDI hardware, but it is baffling. I'm not sure why they didn't use a standard BNC connector and went with one that sticks so much farther than normal, but it is what it is. Be aware of the snag risk. Also, be aware that the green block that's sticking out of your camera when you get it is a removable terminal block. It isn't obvious that it is unpluggable at a glance; I realized this when I bought a camera from another manufacturer, and they shipped a similar block, but in a plastic bag. It's probably worth unplugging that immediately unless you plan to use it, because having extra plugs sticking out the back of the camera is an accident waiting to happen, IMO. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 1, 2021 by dgatwood

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