I can see these forums provide virtually no responses. Oh well, I should have figured the "0" meant somethign. But I'll at least follow up on my post, with an example.
This is an outside photo, in sun, with good lighting. image is through a window so it's not the best. But it's pretty good.
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But this is an inside photo,
in a well lit room. Any $20 camera would have done a better job with this light. I can't imagine that a camera that costs nearly $200, is this poor. The metal box by the water dish is even gray. The walls are even cream colored. But there is so much grain effect that it's hard to tell the original color. You can see that sunlight is coming from a window through the door. And there is a very large window on the left. And another door forward and left. Can't see those windows and doors but the light comes through just fine, to light up this room.
Is there any setting that can improve this quality? This should not be this grainy, based on my experience with other cameras. BTW, both cameras are the same model (DCS-2330L), not the 5222L as the title suggests. And if I switch the cameras the effect switches cameras. So it's not something defective in the camera. It's just poor low light capability problem. And the 5222L is the same.
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I realize these cameras aren't meant for photographic contest quality. But there is plenty enough light in this room, to get a quality photo. This photo is so grainy, that the granular twinkling looks like movement, and make motion detection near impossible, unless one is satisfied with a bazillion false triggers.
Is there any setting that can improve the quality of the images? These cameras just don't seem to do well, in anything but very bright sunlight. The IR works well, but it's the area of well lit rooms where they suffer.