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Troubleshooting
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I don't know of any heaters that would not be a fire hazard. I suppose you could build an enclosure that would help keep the cameras out of the elements and rig up a bird bath heater or something similar close by.
Where you live you could completely remove the batteries if you intend to keep constant power to them, but at the temperatures you have in Minnesota, I doubt that the cameras would continue to work without some sort of heat.
Brian
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That is a question I can't answer. Check the temperature specs on the router, (you can probably find them on Amazon).
Brian
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I just had another idea. If you had an enclosure for the camera and another enclosure underneath that wouldn't burn the house down, would a 100 watt bulb inside the lower enclosure work? You would have to be very very careful though.
Brian
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At this point in time, there's no official way to power the cameras outdoors with AC. The outdoor adapter was recalled and a new one has yet to be released
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And to the other part of your questions, I've had two cameras nearly side by side with no performance issues.
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I do have them hooked up to a solar panel so they recharge during sunny days. The only issue is that Arlo pro camera prevents recharge during extremely cold days. I think the coldest it got where I live was around -3 or so and -15 with the wind chill. So for about a month and a half, they weren’t charging. Just yesterday it got to around 40s-50s and charged both cameras all the way to 95%.
I was concerned with the weather and the solar panel but since the camera can last over 2 months with continuous motion activation, highest quality video, I am very satisfied with these cameras and the 2 solar panels. One for each camera. That’s based on that month in a half, they never got below 60% during those cold days.
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