Facial Recognition Devices/Readers
Showing Results for Facial Recognition Devices/Readers
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Speco Technologies
SKU: N16NRX2TB
Speco Technologies N16NRX2TB 16 Channel Facial Recognition Record
16-channel NVR with 2TB storage and built-in facial recognition
- Records 16 IP cameras simultaneously with integrated facial recognition for real-time identification
- 2TB onboard storage eliminates need for external NAS; ONVIF-compliant for any camera brand
- Motion detection and analytics-driven recording modes reduce storage use and investigation time
$1,229.55 $671.99 Save $557.56 -
Speco Technologies
SKU: N16NRX32TB
Speco Technologies N16NRX32TB 16 Channel Facial Recognition Recor
16-channel NVR with 32TB storage and on-board facial recognition
- Real-time facial recognition engine identifies and catalogs faces across all 16 channels simultaneously
- 32TB integrated hard drive supports extended retention for continuous recording without external storage
- Object detection and behavior analysis process video locally with event-driven alerts
$8,052.80 $3,108.99 Save $4,943.81 -
Speco Technologies
SKU: N8NRE4TB
Speco Technologies N8NRE4TB 8-Channel Facial Recognition Recorder
8-channel NVR with on-premise facial recognition and 4TB storage
- Real-time facial detection and matching without external GPU or cloud
- 8-channel simultaneous recording with H.265/H.264 codec flexibility
- Object detection and behavior monitoring with configurable event alerts
$990.15 $525.99 Save $464.16 -
Speco Technologies
SKU: N8NRX16TB
Speco Technologies N8NRX16TB 8 Channel Facial Recognition Recorde
8-channel NVR with onboard facial recognition and 16TB storage
- Facial detection, extraction & recognition built into recorder—no external server needed
- 8 concurrent IP camera streams with 16TB integrated drive for extended retention
- Multi-object detection & behavioral analytics on ONVIF-compliant camera feeds
$4,033.00 $1,556.99 Save $2,476.01
Facial Recognition Devices/Readers
Facial recognition devices provide contactless biometric authentication for access control systems. These readers verify identity using advanced recognition algorithms, supporting secure, high-traffic, and credential-free entry workflows.
Plan Your Deployment
- Security level and identity verification requirements
- Integration with existing controllers and management platforms
- User enrollment and template management workflow
- Environmental factors (lighting, indoor vs outdoor)
- Privacy policies and regulatory compliance considerations
- Readers & Authentication
- Control Systems Overview
- Request facial recognition recommendations
Facial Recognition Devices/Readers — Engineering-Grade Credential Reading for Commercial Deployments
This category covers 1 working models of facial recognition devices/readers sourced manufacturer-direct or through channel-direct US distribution. Build the rest of your system around the architectural choices below — compatibility, environmental rating, and lifecycle decisions made here propagate through every downstream component you specify.
What to Look For
Credential technology drives reader choice. Legacy 125 kHz prox is easy to clone with off-the-shelf tools and should be retired wherever security matters. 13.56 MHz contactless (HID iCLASS Seos, Mifare DESFire EV2/EV3) uses encrypted mutual authentication and is the current standard. Multi-format readers buy migration flexibility but cost more per door and consume more current.
Form factor and mounting decide installation cost and aesthetic fit. Mullion-mount readers fit narrow door frames; wall-mount readers offer larger antennas and longer read range. Indoor versus outdoor (IP65/IP67) ratings drive housing choice. Backlit keypads, LED indicators, and audible beep volume affect usability — operator complaints almost always trace back to ergonomics, not the controller logic upstream.
OSDP support is now baseline for any new reader purchase. OSDP brings encrypted communication, tamper detection, and over-the-wire firmware updates. SIA OSDP Verified compliance (and OSDP Secure Channel) signals interoperability with controllers across vendors. Wiegand-only readers should be reserved for retrofit-only situations where pulling new cable isn't feasible.
Biometric and facial recognition readers add convenience but introduce template management, lighting requirements, and accuracy/false-rejection tradeoffs. Plan enrollment workflow, GDPR/BIPA compliance for stored biometric templates, and lighting upgrades at the reader site. Hybrid readers — credential + biometric — are common for compliance-sensitive environments where two-factor at the door is required.
Key Specs in This Category
| Spec | Available Options |
|---|---|
| Resolution | 2MP |
| IP Rating | IP65 |
| Connectivity | Wired |
| Power | AC/DC |
| Type | Accessory |
Top Brands in This Category
Frequently Asked Questions
How far away can a credential be read?
13.56 MHz contactless reads at 2-4 inches with standard antennas. Long-range UHF readers (433 MHz, 900 MHz) read at 5-30 feet and are common in parking, vehicle ingress, and hands-free entry applications. The tradeoff is security — longer-range reads create larger opportunities for relay attacks. Match read range to the use case and confirm reader-credential pairing before mass-issuing credentials.
Can I read multiple credential types on one reader?
Multi-format readers (HID multiCLASS SE, ASSA OSDP multi-tech) support 125 kHz, 13.56 MHz, and mobile credentials simultaneously. They cost roughly 30-50% more than single-format readers but eliminate the credential-migration cliff. For organizations issuing mobile credentials alongside cards or transitioning from legacy prox, multi-format is almost always the right choice.
What's the difference between iCLASS Seos and Mifare DESFire?
Both are encrypted 13.56 MHz contactless standards used in modern access control. HID iCLASS Seos is HID's proprietary platform — broad reader ecosystem, mobile credential support via HID Mobile Access. Mifare DESFire EV2/EV3 is an open NXP standard used by many independent vendors and transit systems. Choose based on which controller/reader ecosystem you've committed to; performance is comparable.
How long do credentials last?
Physical cards last 5-7 years under normal pocket-and-purse use. Key fobs typically last longer, 7-10 years. Battery-powered active credentials (UHF tags) are limited by battery life, often 3-5 years. Mobile credentials don't have physical wear but require active phone OS support. Build credential replacement into annual budget; lost-card replacement runs $5-25 per card depending on technology.
Are biometric readers reliable enough for primary entry?
Modern fingerprint and facial recognition readers achieve very low false-reject rates (under 1% with good enrollment) and false-accept rates well below 1 in 100,000. They're reliable enough for primary entry in most commercial applications, with two important caveats: lighting and angle requirements for facial readers are strict, and a small minority of users have fingerprints that don't enroll reliably. Always pair biometrics with a credential fallback path.
Need help choosing? Talk to a Senior Specialist — direct line 877-277-7147 or request a quote.