Ring drone release7/24/2023 ![]() ![]() ![]() A house with a smaller floor plan could probably get by with just the Always Home Cam. That’s not to say that it shouldn’t be used in homes with larger layouts, but for bigger residences, it may make more sense to combine the Always Home with other surveillance cameras. Yes, once triggered, the Always Home starts recording footage through its entire flight path, but if a break-in is taking place on the first floor of your home and your Always Home is upstairs, it will inevitably take longer to get out of the room it’s located in, down the stairs, and to wherever the trigger was initiated. That being said, homes with much larger floor plans and multiple floors may not be such an easy feat. Assuming the Always Home can dart along at a decent clip, it should be able to get to the other end of the home to get whatever woke it on-camera. That 900 square feet and single story aren’t too much real estate to cover. Let’s say one of your Ring motion sensors is triggered at one end of your home, and the Always Home is located at the other end. Consider your floor-planĭo you live in an average 900-square-foot, single-story ranch? This kind of residential layout seems pretty perfect for the Always Home to traverse. The Always Home Cam is an exciting addition to Ring’s pantheon of products, but does it make sense for the average joe to invest in one of these flying guardians? That depends, but here are a few thinking points to mull over while you think about getting added to Ring’s Always Home Cam invite list.
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