TandemVu is not simply a standard PTZ with a higher specification. It addresses a specific operational limitation: a conventional PTZ can lose the wider scene when it turns or zooms in.
A standard PTZ provides one movable main view. A TandemVu model combines an overview imaging channel with a PTZ detail channel, allowing the wider area to remain visible while the PTZ inspects or tracks a target.
Standard PTZ and TandemVu at a Glance
| Design area | Standard PTZ | TandemVu PTZ |
|---|---|---|
| Main view | One movable PTZ imaging channel | Overview channel plus movable PTZ detail channel |
| When zooming | The previous wide scene may no longer be visible | The overview channel can retain wider context |
| Hardware complexity | Single main imaging system | Multiple lenses, sensors, channels, and coordination logic |
| Backend demand | Usually simpler channel and recording plan | Multiple streams may affect NVR channels, bandwidth, decoding, and storage |
| Best fit | Sites with existing fixed overview coverage or defined priority zones | Large open areas where context must remain visible during detail inspection |
Why TandemVu Usually Costs More
The device includes an overview imaging system and a separate PTZ detail system.
Supported models coordinate detection, positioning, zoom, and tracking across channels.
More streams and smart functions place greater demand on camera processing.
Additional streams may increase recorder, bandwidth, decoding, and storage needs.
Compare the Complete Solution
- Two devices
- Potentially two mounting positions
- Separate cabling and switch ports
- Independent configuration and commissioning
- Overview and detail in one device
- One primary installation point
- Multiple streams still require backend capacity
- Model-specific linkage and configuration
Comparing the device price of a TandemVu model only with the device price of a standard PTZ. A fair comparison should include the possible fixed overview camera, additional bracket, cabling, switch port, labor, and commissioning.
When Is TandemVu More Likely to Be Worthwhile?
Operators can retain context while inspecting a vehicle or person.
Movement across walkways, fields, and parking zones may require both views.
Vehicles and personnel move between multiple areas within one broad scene.
Operators may need site context while checking activity at longer distance.
When a Standard PTZ May Be the Better Choice
- Fixed cameras already provide continuous overview coverage
- The PTZ is used mainly for manual inspection or preset patrols
- The site has clearly defined priority zones
- Recorder channel and storage capacity are limited
- The project budget is focused on zoom and detail rather than multi-channel context
System Questions Before Selecting TandemVu
Define the operational problem the overview channel must solve.
Count NVR channels, bandwidth, decoding, and retention for every stream.
Verify the exact model, NVR, VMS, firmware, and configuration.
Price the fixed overview camera, extra installation point, cable, and labor.
TandemVu products do not all have the same channel resolution, zoom, low-light technology, tracking, or linkage features. Use the latest datasheet for the exact model.
FAQ
Does TandemVu replace every fixed camera?
No. Coverage, lens direction, blind areas, entrance evidence, and redundancy still need a project-level design.
Does TandemVu require more NVR channels?
It can. The overview and PTZ channels may need separate recording and decoding capacity depending on the model and configuration.
Is TandemVu always more cost-effective?
No. It is most valuable when continuous overview is operationally important or when it replaces a meaningful amount of separate equipment and installation work.
Provide the site layout, required overview, target distance, tracking workflow, existing NVR model, channel plan, and alternative fixed-camera design.




