Gle Coupe Rear Camera Question
#26
@shadowndust,
Thanks for clearing up this mystery. For me, it hasn't been a problem. I've never had any camera image delay when shifting into reverse, so it hasn't been an issue. I believe the reason the camera needs to calibrate itself is because it moves into place whenever activated, as opposed to a stationary camera.
Thanks for clearing up this mystery. For me, it hasn't been a problem. I've never had any camera image delay when shifting into reverse, so it hasn't been an issue. I believe the reason the camera needs to calibrate itself is because it moves into place whenever activated, as opposed to a stationary camera.
#27
MBWorld Fanatic!
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 2,342
Likes: 442
From: The Palmetto State
19 E63s(wifeys) & a 21 GLE580
My reverse camera door started doing this again recently and I took mine in for this reason and some other things yesterday. I was told by the SA that this was normal and it is the camera "recalibrating" itself. I kind of laughed out loud, but was assured that this is normal and he told me some of the same figures that were in the memo. Still, this just seems odd.
Last edited by BACnMercedes; 08-21-2018 at 01:39 PM.
#28
My reverse camera door started doing this again recently and I took mine in for this reason and some other things yesterday. I was told by the SA that this was normal and it is the camera "recalibrating" itself. I kind of laughed out loud, but was assured that this is normal and he told me some of the same figures that were in the memo. Still, this just seems odd.
#29
Camera Image on COMAND Display
Has anyone experimented with the LCD "brightness" setting on the 360 degree camera display? I've noticed the default setting (middle of the scale) is way too dark. Maximum brightness actually looks normal, and greatly improves night vision. Try it and see what you think.
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F18BEN (12-13-2018)
#30
Has anyone experimented with the LCD "brightness" setting on the 360 degree camera display? I've noticed the default setting (middle of the scale) is way too dark. Maximum brightness actually looks normal, and greatly improves night vision. Try it and see what you think.
I also didn't realize that you could change the setting...
Hummm...
#31
Neither did I, until I compared the two. It's not horrible. It's just not as good as it should be. It's like when you first discover you need glasses. You don't realize how bad your vision is, until it's corrected. You become accustomed to blurry vision and mentally adapt. Try adjusting this for yourself. You'll see what I mean. With the brightness increased, even the sky looks bluer. Whoever set the default exposure, obviously had no photographic experience.