🔍 Discover the unseen with BlueFire's cutting-edge endoscope!
The BlueFireUpgraded Super Long 1080P Semi-Rigid Wireless Endoscope is a state-of-the-art inspection camera designed for both Android and iOS devices. With a 2 MP HD camera, adjustable resolutions, and a robust 1800mA battery, it offers unparalleled clarity and extended usage time. Its IP68 waterproof rating allows for versatile applications in wet environments, making it an essential tool for professionals seeking reliable and high-quality inspections.
G**A
Good quality
Used a few times easy to connect good picture quality adjustable brightness
J**E
Not waterproof, but rugged and excellent picture
Rated at only a meter of water depth for one minute. Useless for my application in a well. This info should have been provided up front.I shall upgrade to 4 stars. So not water proof, but turns out my well problem is out of the water. The picture quality is excellent and the unit can take abuse banging along a 2" well pipe. I went down to 50 feet using a long power cable. So the control unit is inside the well in a plastic bag.) Certainly worth the price if you get a good quality unit, which this appears to be. I taped the scope along 1/2 iron metal pipe secured by a poly rope and taped a penlight on the other side. Without the light, the probe is blind except for the last inch. I also taped a larger sleeve over the end to keep the probe from scraping the pipe sides and picking up gunk. I am delighted with picture quality.
M**E
Good picture, low led light
Picture is good but the led lights are poor, needed to duck tape a torch to the end! Otherwise good, easy to use
L**N
SO EASY TO USE
We bought this to check a dryer vent on a house we just bought. OMG the vent was at least 30ft + long. Went from one side to the other. With what we saw with this camera, we knew we had a big problem. We ripped open the ceiling in the basement to where we figured the camera had stopped and found a disconnected pipe with so much lint packed in the pipe and cavity of the ceiling! Why they hadn't had a fire I don't know. But we where glad we had bougth this camera. This is also handy for checking wiring, which we are doing now.
K**Y
Died after 1 use.
Died after 1 use.
K**H
SOS . This is the former "Depstech" product in Sheeps clothing
If you had the Depstech and think this is any different, think again. The Wifi name and app settings and GUI are identical to that of the Depstech cam found on Amazon in the past which I readily gave away due to inconsistent connectivity and constant annoying digital freezeframing after advancing scope just a few feet where live video was interrupted bydigital noise and frozen frames forcing you to stop. Even if it were a different vendor, you'll experience the same exact low tech wifi weirdness, here, when it comes to set up. Thereafter, connecting via wifi becomes a hit and miss experience. Nothing is intuitive about connecting. The instructions although written in earnest are written with an Eastern mindset where the the obvious steps are overdone, while the important key points that connect the dots are left out leaving you to fill in the blank for the missing link. And perhaps it wouldn't be so confusing if they would just clean up or better yet leave out the low-tech software thats been diluted down and framed into an App with features that are simply a waste of space and only end up confusing an otherwise simple setup. The reason I got this was to find a scope that was competitively better than the depstech, expecting maybe a cable that was going to be stiffer/maybe self straightening and one that stays connected with no loss of signal (digital freezeframing) not to mention a no glitch wifi setup. I thought its been a few years since I bought the Depstech, surely technology is light years ahead, but, no, welcome to my nightmare..... its the Depstech all over again with a new name that would make a pitchman proud.....hmmmm...need I explain why they had to rename the product :((( I'll give em this, the instructions are much more detailed but they better be after the barrage of mega mega threads from eager buyers (complaining) confused by the inability to consistently connect their cam to phone via wifi. So the product kinda got tainted, I'm guessing, and judging by the tedious instruction sheet they wanted to get it right by truly dumbing it down when the real culprit was actually the buggy app getting in the way. It is so cluttered with either obsolete or afterthought options that simply waste space and if selected along with creating a password ensured the path to failed connection and after imprinting these selections into the OS, ensured a doomed to fail setup when retrying the setup,in other words, buggy as hell. Maybe I'm ignorant, but I'm just an average consumer with above average wifi setup experience and it doesnt have to be this hard..Know that this is no comparison to a pro sewer snake if you're using it for plumbing A true sewer snake cam has a much more wide angle lens, this has not. Moreover, and just like the Depstech, the image just after a few feet begins to stutter then freezes up, then after a very annoying long pause, catches up and refreshes to live view again and thats over Netgear Orbi wifi router 10 feet away. At this point you have to stop and wait, meanwhile, you've lost your momentum for minimizing friction encounter by advancing in a swift continuous manner. Starting the feed from rest each time gets a little harder and makes the whole line more prone to kinking. Also, each time the freezeframe occurs you have to reorient once the live image poops up cause the scope now has moved.HD image...sucker, definitely appealing....hmmmpfff.... bottom line, the new improved image was maybe a miniscule better in resolution, but overall nothing improved from my perspective since all I saw was the same narrow field of view making it difficult to orient. Wide angle is what's needed not higher rez. And equally detracting is the max distance you can push the relatively stiff cam wire down your conduit of choice. Based on my having used this in 3 separate unique plumbing scenarios where schedule 40 PVC was the conduit, I was unable to advance much more than 15 feet before the cable's stiffness (compressive/axial/ tensile? force or whatever the parameter of stiffness strength is) ultimately and predictably gave in at which point the scope began to loop and crumple on itself when trying to push it any further down a 2" PVC pipe after navigating/driving the cable past maybe two 45's (degree bends) and no 90's. So beware that longer doesn't mean the scope will advance that much more. 15 feet was the average maximum distance I was able to feed the scope down the conduit leaving a large amount of excess bulky camera cable that will never see the inside of a conduit. Friction being the culprit and after one or two turns at the leading end you will create a residual curvature that compounds and that inevitably will bind up the leading end as this cable is not self straightening nor does it have puppet strings to pull the tip back to straight as seen on the more serious prohibitively costly steering scopes. I suppose you could duct tape this scope to a sewer snake using it to piggy back on the stiff coiled snake as it corkscrews and self-pulls on down the conduit, but the trauma at joints might shred the outer jacket of the cam or duct tape and kill the cam line. I would think though you'd definitely get further than 15 feet. Again, by itself and manually pushing it, friction caught up and stopped my ability to advance any further after two 45 bends, and that was even with it even with the water running full blast. So translate that somehow if you're using it in AC ducts, etc. One or two bends before the limit is reached. Now in a perfect world all plumbing and electrical conduit as well as ductwork would be friction-free or more realistically, one continuous straight tube with no joints, unions, 30's/45s/60's/90's or snags or debris to clear, but thats rare and in reality after you feed several feet of line down a conduit manually pushing from one point the friction along the entire line becomes exponentially unforgiving and won't budge without buckling at your end, in my case it began roughly after 15 feet. At that point, the bulk of the force from the feeding end is cancelled out by friction and by then your pissin in the wind cause the line has already begun to fold on itself. Jus sayinThere are many other good uses for this as in maybe looking behind a sheetrock panel for mold, thats assuming there's no insulation in the wall, and thats probably rare for an exterior wall. Oh well, I'm sure there's a 101 other uses for this cam .
A**S
easy to use and versatile
this device is a great tool for exploring tight spaces. Use it to examine your chimney, pipes and floor registers. If you’ve dropped something to a space out of reach, there’s even hook and magnet attachments to aid in recovering items dropped out of reach. Excellent product highly recommend it.
K**R
Good on point!!!
The device works a describe, just it produces its own wifi field that you connect to with your cellphone and the password is in the manual in the box. I charge fully before using, just because i like to start out with all my electronic items with a full charge battery. So far works and the pic is as promised
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 month ago