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Digital Camera World
Digital Camera World
George Cairns

Reolink Argus 4 Pro review

Reolink Argus 4 Pro security camera attached to a brick wall.

Reolink produces a wide range of wireless Wi-Fi connected security cameras and the Argus 4 Pro (and the slightly cheaper but almost identically specced Argus 4) are the latest cameras in the Argus range. Unlike older Argus cameras the Argus 4 models are dual-lensed. Much more on that later. 

When setting up a security camera you face the challenge of where to point it. If you point it at the back gate on the left, you may miss an intruder climbing over your garden wall on the right. The Reolink Argus 4 Pro is a dual-lensed security camera that covers a panoramic 180º field of view, so more of your property will fit into its motion detection window. If it detects an intruder you’ll receive a notification on your smartphone so you can view the camera’s feed in real time. Alternatively, you can watch the recordings of incidents if you pop a microSD card into the camera.

The Argus 4 Pro has a similar spec to the slightly cheaper Argus 4, but the Pro captures better-looking full-color footage at night thanks to ColorX's true full-color night vision (compared to the Argus 4’s standard night color vision). The price difference is so small that it makes sense to go for the Pro version.

The battery powered Argus 4 Pro survey’s your property day and night like a robotic owl. It’s very easy to install and connect to your smartphone. (Image credit: George Cairns / Digital Camera World)

Reolink Argus 4 Pro: Specifications

Reolink Argus 4 Pro: Design & Handling

I must confess that although I’ve been commissioned to review the Reolink Argus 4 Pro for quite a while, I’ve found myself putting it aside in favor of mics, camera backpacks, and gimbals which are easier to set up than security cameras. The last security camera I tested - the Eufy S100 Wall Light Cam involved wiring up the camera to my home’s mains supply, which took over an hour of drilling and fiddling with wire cutters and screws. Thanks to the patient persistence of Reolink’s PR people (sorry again for the delay!) I unboxed the Argus 4 Pro and to my relief, it was a much quicker and easier process to get it up and running. I don’t do much DIY, but the Argus 4 Pro ships with a little paper template that enables you to drill two accurately placed holes in the exterior of your home. You can then screw in the mounting plate (with the supplied screws and plugs) and attach the plastic camera to the plastic plate via a screw thread. 

If you don’t fancy doing any DIY then the Reolink Argus 4 Pro ships with an alternative metal mount and a white strap that you can use to fit it securely to a tree or drain pipe. Just make sure you fit it within range of your WiFi router so that you can monitor the camera via the Reolink smartphone app.

If you install a micro SD into the camera’s card slot then it will record any motion triggered incidents to the card for you to watch later. (Image credit: George Cairns / Digital Camera World)

Once the camera has been charged via its USB-C socket and mounted to the wall you can easily unscrew it to remove it and then top up its battery charge. Alternatively, you can purchase a solar panel that you can plug into the Argus 4 Pro to keep its charge topped up by Mother Nature (though of course, it will be best if the camera and solar panel are on a sun-facing wall.)

The Argus 4 Pro has an eye-catching design. Instead of the usual single lens as typified by the Eufy Security 4G Starlight Camera, the Argus 4 Pro boasts two lenses. They are further apart than a human’s eyes would be but this enables the camera to capture a 180º field of view that covers the width of your front or back yard. This gives the camera the appearance of a robot owl, watching over your property day and night.

Instead of having to drill two holes to mount the Argus 4 Pro on a wall you can attach it to trees or pipes using the supplied cable and mount.  (Image credit: George Cairns / Digital Camera World)

Before I mounted the camera on the wall I followed the instructions in the Quick Setup Guide leaflet to connect it to my WiFi router. The guide told me to scan the QR code on the rear of the camera. I did so using my iPhone’s Camera app but this didn’t take me to a set-up page. I then realized that I needed to scan the code from within the Reolink app and from then on it was plane sailing to get the Argus 4 Pro to send footage to the Reolink app.

The footage does look good though (as you’ll see from our supporting video) and unlike some other cameras, the nocturnal footage is in full color as the camera uses ColorX true full-color night vision rather than infrared. You can also summon extra illumination from the Argus 4 Pro’s built-in spotlight by tapping the light icon in the app if you need to light someone in the foreground.

Reolink Argus 4 Pro: Performance

Once I had attached the Argus 4 Pro to its wall-mount I enjoyed seeing the camera’s 180º feed from within the Reolink app. Reolink describes the footage as being 4K but this isn’t strictly accurate. 4K footage measures 3840 x 2160. The 180º field-of-view footage from the Argus 4 Pro is much wider than 4K at 5120 pixels, but at 1440 pixels it’s not as tall. When viewed on a smartphone this creates a narrow band of footage letterboxed by large black bars above and below the clip. In effect this makes the Argus 4 Pro’s feed look very narrow on a smartphone but you can pinch to zoom in on the feed in the Reolink app to get a closer look at a visitor who has triggered the alert. As well as being panoramic (with only a 50º of vertical field of view) the footage runs at between 10 and 15 frames per second, so it will look jerkier if you compare it to 30 fps 4K footage from other cameras. 

The Argus 4 Pro creates its wide field of view by using two lenses. It therefore needs to stitch the footage together to create its panoramic clips.  This stitching isn’t perfect, resulting in a slight mismatch when a person stands in the stitched area at the center of the frame. This is a bit of an Achille’s Heal for the Argus 4 Pro as it means that you can’t clearly identify someone who’s standing in the centre of the field of view. The camera is marketed as having no blind spot by covering a 180º field-of-view, but technically this blur in the stitching means that there is a small blind spot bang in the middle, and that loses it half a star rating.

The free Reolink smartphone app is very useful. When an alert pings into view you can tap on it to open the Reolink app and view your visitor in real time. By tapping the Camera icon you can record the footage onto your smartphone. You can also tap the Mic icon to hear the visitor speaking via the camera, and there’s a handy Talk icon that you can press to tell a postman to leave a parcel in a specific place, for example. On the downside, the little speaker on the camera isn’t very loud so you might have to shout to communicate with a visitor! The nice thing about the Argus 4 Pro is that you can receive alerts, view footage, and even talk to people live via the camera’s speaker - even if you’re miles away. The camera feed transfers via Wi-Fi to your router and then to your phone via your service provider’s data package. 

Thanks to ColorX true full-color night vision you get a good quality colour feed at night.  (Image credit: George Cairns / Digital Camera World)

If you don’t notice a pop-up alert on your smartphone the Reolink Argus 4 Pro can also capture incidents directly onto a card in its micro SD slot (though you need to supply the card). You can then stream these recordings via the Reolink app later. This is handy if you want to see what triggered the camera to start recording during the night. You can easily share these recordings (to the police for example) with a tap via the app so that an extra level of security might help keep your home insurance premium down a bit. It is possible that a burglar could unscrew the Argus 4 Pro from its wall mount and remove the evidence of their presence by stealing the camera. So for a small monthly fee (£3.49 in the UK), you can get the Argus 4 Pro to send recorded incidents safely to the cloud where they can be accessed via the Reolink smartphone app.  The £3.49 fee includes 30GB of storage space.

The 180º field of view generates panoramic footage that has large black bars above and below your recordings. (Image credit: George Cairns / Digital Camera World)

Talking of unwanted visitors you can set the Argus 4 Pro to emit an audio alarm when it detects motion. You can also trigger this alarm manually when you’re watching the live feed from the camera on your phone to ward off intruders. It could be annoying if the audio alarm goes off when the cat wanders home. Nor do you want a passer-by (or a neighbor in the garden) to trigger an alert. Fortunately, you can use the Reolink app to make the Argus 4 Pro create non-detection zones. It can also be customized to be more or less sensitive to people and animals using a slider. You can also get it to draw a tracking box around a subject (such as a person or a cat) to make them easier to spot. Indeed the Argus 4 Pro can recognise people and animals and you’ll see a paw print icon in the app’s feed when a pet is detected. It will display a person-shaped icon for people that it spots.

The feed from the two lenses is stitched together. Objects that cross the stitch (such as this subject’s face) can be a bit blurred. (Image credit: George Cairns / Digital Camera World)

Reolink Argus 4 Pro: Verdict

All in all the Reolink Argus 4 Pro is an affordable way to provide you with peace of mind when you’re at home or out and about, thanks to video notifications on your smartphone of any motion-detected activity. And as I tested it on a windy day it is clever enough to only detect people, not wind-blown trees (thanks to its Passive Infrared (PiR) sensor.) The stitching between the two lenses isn’t perfect with a blurred seam down the middle, but the 180º of wide-angle coverage is very welcome. 

I’m not a big fan of the panoramic shape of the captured clips as key details look quite small on my iPhone’s screen (especially when bordered top and bottom by large black bars).  The two-way mic works better when listening via the camera but your voice is very faint when emitted via the camera’s speaker (even when it’s turned to full volume). 

So it’s not a perfect device, but it's affordable and should detect (and even deter) unwanted visitors without blowing your budget.

You can buy the camera bundled with a solar panel, so there’s no need to remove the camera from the wall to recharge its battery. (Image credit: George Cairns / Digital Camera World)

✅ Buy it...

  • You need a wide field of view
  • You want full-color footage at night
  • You need to store recordings locally or on the cloud 
  • You need easy ways to mount it

🚫 Don't buy it...

  • You need its panoramic camera footage to match standard 4K resolution

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