- Roofink Trackflex -Flight WiFi is a new outdoor security camera
- It can pan and tilt to cover 360 degrees and have two flights with extra bright
- You can save recordings locally and use AI-driven search to find items
Roofink, which is behind some of the best home security cameras we have tested here at Techradar, has launched a new outdoor security camera with double lenses, double -flowing and (perhaps most impressive) no monthly subscription needed to save and see your recordings.
The Roofelink Trackflex flooding vefi camera has not only two lenses, it can pan 360 degrees to 360-degree coverage to minimize potential blind spots. The camera uses AI to identify and track people and animals as well as reduce fake alarms that can be frustrating and cause unnecessary battery drains.
Your videos are stored on an SD card and you can use AI-driven search to find specific moments instead of scrubbing through hours of recordings. For example, you can search for ‘White Van’ or ‘Woman in Blue Shirt’ to find a moment using natural language.
It sounds a lot like the AI-driven smart search that began to roll out to rings cameras and video duck clocks in March, but unlike Ring, the rope does not lock the feature away behind a payment wall.
If you want to save your videos off-site for extra peace of mind, you can sign up for the Roofink Cloud Service, saving them from the company’s servers, but it is not important. The camera is compatible with SD cards up to 512 GB and you can save even more video on a shelving Home Hub or NAS device.
Find the difference
The camera’s two spotlights have a maximum brightness of 3,000 lumens (compared to 2,000 lumens to Ring Floodlight Cam Wired Plus) and adjustable color temperature, so you can create a warm inviting glow that activates in a schedule, or strong white light triggered by movement to illuminate and deter potential overrun.
It sounds impressive and I hope to review it soon for Techradar, but Rooflink is not the only company competing for a space on your walls. Swann Maxranger4k (who earned four stars in our review, also records of 4K, saves your recordings locally so you don’t have to pay for sky storage, and unlike the shelving camera has a solar panel to reduce the need for recharge.
As the name suggests, Maxranger4K has a particularly long wireless area so you can place cameras over a wide area, but it lacks the pan-and-tile amount at the Roofink Trackflex.
Which one will be more convenient for your home? Hold on to Techradar for a full comparison of the two very soon.



