Flir One
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Thanks for the info about the flir one camera. Overheating is a bit of a worry as is the low resolution. I have been using a flir sr camera with Isadora since 2009 for tracking. The camera is very robust - it is in a security camera housing and that accommodates scaffold clamps or bar hooks. it is very quick to set-up and because it sees the thermal spectrum (far infrared) it does not need infrared lighting and is not affected by event or stage lighting. Another consideration has been heat residues, heated up surfaces that make hot spots from the body heat of performers doing floor work. The sensor is a bolometer sensitive to radiant energy so it will not capture an image through glass, however it will see through material with no thermal mass - such as some thin plastic sheeting - so there is some potential for trickery.You can see the heat residue effect captured by a thermal camera in this Clip from Philippe Baylaucq film's ORA. https://youtu.be/1x6uNZngW00cheersbonemap -
Just curious, what are the cooling solutions of which you speak?
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The flir sr uses a passive cooling system so it is all built in. For the military grade camera used for Baylaucq film I understand they used liquid nitrogen to cool the sensor, pouring it into the top of the camera a couple of times a day. The camera used for their film is a special piece of kit and achieved incredible detail and clarity. I am not sure what to use to cool a mobile phone?
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The version I am using is the iOS based version. I set up a small fan next to my phone to keep it cool and that has worked in my testing. Though I have not tried using it for more than an hour or so.
(It isn't the camera getting hot, it is the phone it self getting hot and going into a protect mode that I had to deal with.)-Alex -
Also, at least with my iOS version - It is also worth noting that there is no way of keeping the phone battery charged while the Flir is plugged in . . . so I'm guessing the hour that I was playing is about as long as I could expect it to work regardless.
-Alex -
This FLIR camera seems to have same resolution as the FLIR ONE, but can be hooked to arduino, raspberry pi etc:
https://youtu.be/X92f6WH-qvg--8 -
Nice. I had seen these somewhere but it totally escaped me until this reminder. This seems like a much more workable use of their simple sensors.
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Very interesting this rasperry pi version
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Found and Arduino Breakout for it here: https://forum.arduino.cc/index.php?topic=266361.0
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Yes the flir lepton looks really interesting for its potential. I can imagine this was developed for quadcopter/drone market.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ru0-UADMGXMcheers,bonemap