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Kami home security system review

Mar 17, 2024Mar 17, 2024

REVIEW – Home security is all the rage today. Yi, maker of the Yi Home Camera 3 standalone security camera is jumping into the full system fray with their Kami product.

Kami is a modular do-it-yourself home security system. I was sent the base system that includes the base station, three entry sensors and a motion sensor as well as their wireless HD camera.

More correctly, what’s in the boxes – there were seven in total.

Box 1 – base station

Boxes 2,3,4 – entry sensors

Box 5 – motion sensor

Box 6 – another base station

Box 7 – wire-free camera

Box 8 – wire-free camera battery charger plus a spare battery

Base system

1x Kami Smart Security Base Station:Wired Network: RJ45Wireless Connection: 2.4GHZ Wi-FiOperating Temperature: 0-45° Degree Celsius / 40°-115° FahrenheitPower input: DC 5V/1A

3 x Kami Entry Sensor:Battery Type: CR2450Operating Temperature: 0-45° Degrees Celsius / 40°-115° Fahrenheit

1x Kami Motion Sensor:Battery Type: CR2450Operating Temperature: 0-45° Degrees Celsius / 40°-115° Fahrenheit

Wire-free camera system

1 x Kami Wire-Free Camera:Infrared night vision: 18 feetCamera viewing angle: 113° degrees (H), 59° degrees (V), 140° degrees (D)Video specification: 1080P / 20fpsOperating temperature: 14-122 Degrees Fahrenheit

1x Kami Smart Security Base Station:Wireless connection: 2.4GHZ Wi-FiOperating temperature: 32-113 Fahrenheit

2 x Battery:Rated capacity: 1600mAh/11.84Wh

1 x Battery charger:Rated power: 9W

The Kami system is designed to be modular – you add what you need for your specific installation. Let’s take a look into the setup.

Base station

The first thing to do is to download the IOS or Android Kami Home app from the appropriate store. Once installed, set up a Kami Home account. This is where I ran into an issue. As a Yi Home camera user, it turns out that the Yi Home and Kami Home accounts are the same things. So, I simply logged into Kami Home with my Yi Home credentials.

Now, to get a base station installed. The base station must be plugged into a router. Luckily, I had a couple of ports available on one of my eero remotes.

Design flaw here:

The Ethernet adapter/power cord combo plugs into the end of the USB power puck, creating a two-inch-long monster that is impossible to hide behind furniture without moving said piece quite a distance from the wall.

To start the setup, choose what it is you are installing.

After getting everything plugged in, Yi’s usual, excellent, voice prompts from the device lead you through pairing. In the app, I chose to add a base station. The app found the base station immediately and paired as expected.

The base station is very small. Here it is sitting on top on my eero router.

Entry sensor

Again, set up is pretty simple. Choose to add an entry sensor in the app, and the app leads you. Open it up, install the battery – battery orientation is pictured in the app, place it near the base station and scan the QR code inside the cover. Then the app prompts you to push the reset button with the included reset pin. There is a little green light to the left of the reset hole. Once flashing, confirm that in the app and the base station reports verbally that the sensor is paired.

The app shows devices as they are added.

And, the app provides mounting instructions:

That last item – align with the mark – refers to marks on the two parts of the sensor that need to be matched up.

Motion sensor

Setup for the motion sensor followed the same steps as the entry sensor.

Start by twisting the back off. I couldn’t do it. Then, I saw the lock indicator.

After I twisted it to the unlock position, the back came off easily.

Here is a view of the green LED I mentioned above that flashes after hitting the reset button, indicating it is ready for pairing.

Each device confirms when it pairs.

You can set a location tag for each device.

Camera

Camera set up is essentially the same as the other devices. Pop off the back to access the door lock for the battery compartment.

Swinging open the door, we find the battery compartment.

The battery drops in and immediately powers up the camera. Its voice prompt tells you it is powered up.

After closing the unit and placing it on the base for stability, place it by the base station, press the main button on top and the app leads you through automatic pairing. Both the camera and base station’s voice prompts report that the pairing is complete.

One note – the camera is an indoor/outdoor camera, so you can use this to monitor your outdoor spaces.

Battery charger

There is no setup for the battery charger – just plug it in and pop in a battery to charge. Four LEDs report charging progress.

After installing an entry sensor, I moved the entry sensor parts apart and back together to test operation.

The app recorded each event. When the system was in away mode, the base station started audibly alarming minutes before I received an alert in the app. Eventually, I got an alert and was able to see the alert and silence the alarm.

I also tested the motion sensor. It picked up motion successfully, but looks like they sent an old battery!

After adding the camera, it produced good quality video and images.

The camera does not have an SD card slot, meaning that you cannot save any video without subscribing to the Kami Cloud recording service. Pricing runs from $66 to $199 annually depending on how long the videos are saved and whether it records full-time or only motion activated recording.

There are two modes, home, where alarms are silenced and away, where alerts trigger the base station alarm and app notifications, To change to/from home and away mode, you slide the icon to the right to activate away mode and to the left to activate home mode.

After just a few days, the battery in the camera died. I was surprised how quickly it died, but it probably really wasn’t fully charged. Still, there was no notification from the app. If there was from the camera, it happened at night or when I wasn’t home, so there was no way to know. I only discovered it when I looked in the app and saw the camera was offline. Speaking of notifications, the app seemed to regularly sleep and notifications from motion would only come in sporadically, and then, in groups.

Finally, after the battery died in the camera, I expected to drop in the other battery and be back in business. Nope. I put in the battery and got the verbal welcome message. I checked the app, expecting to see the camera back online. Nope. The camera didn’t come back online after I put in the battery. I tried it multiple times with the camera right next to the hub. Nothing. I finally deleted the camera from the Kami hub and went through the pairing process again. Still nothing. I followed the procedures in the app exactly as I did for the initial pairing and I could never get the camera to pair again.

Overall, I am not impressed with this DIY security system. The setup and installation are simple and the sensors and camera all work well until the battery dies. The alerts take some time to reach your device and the only other alarm is a somewhat muted alarm at the base station. With no options for central monitoring, it is limited to audibly alerting inside your home and on your phone. Plus, you are required to pay for cloud recording, since there is no SD card option on the camera. It is not documented in the app, but it does include six months of cloud recording.

With spotty alerts and problems when battery-powered devices lose power, I can’t really recommend this system.

Price: Base system: $99.99; Wire-free camera system: $109.99Where to buy: Amazon – base system and wire-free camera systemSource: The sample of this product was provided by Yi Technology.

REVIEWBox 1 – base stationBoxes 2,3,4 – entry sensorsBox 5 – motion sensorBox 6 – another base stationBox 7 – wire-free cameraBox 8 – wire-free camera battery charger plus a spare batteryBase systemWire-free camera systemBase stationEntry sensorMotion sensorCameraBattery chargerPriceWhere to buySource