New affordable FLIR products

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http://www.gizmag.com/flir-iphone-thermal-imaging/30447/

FLIR turns the heat up on smartphone thermal imaging

By Francis X Govers III

January 13, 2014

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The FLIR ONE is a slide-on attachment that gives iPhones thermal imaging capabilities
The FLIR ONE is a slide-on attachment that gives iPhones thermal imaging capabilities
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FLIR Systems, Inc. announced two new products at CES designed to put thermal imaging into the hands of consumers. The first is a new, consumer-level infrared thermal camera sensor, while the second is a slide-on attachment for Apple iPhone 5 or 5s smartphones that makes use of said sensor. Both could be used to locate lost pets in the dark, look for energy leaking from your house, or to watch for wildlife.

Thermal image of hot water heaterYour cat as seen with the FLIR ONEThe FLIR ONE gives iPhones thermal imaging capabilitiesThe fast way to check your baby's temperatureView all
Thermal cameras have a wide variety of uses, including by law enforcement to look for criminals at night or when hiding in brush, as a night vision system by the military, and by environmental inspectors looking for heat leaks from faulty insulation. They are also standard equipment on many UAVs.

FLIR says the technology also has many applications at the consumer level, including locating heating or cooling leaks in buildings, finding studs in walls, or locating water damage. Outdoor uses might include night navigation, wildlife observation, determining if your fish is fully cooked, or that a campfire is completely out. Firemen certainly could find many uses for the device, searching for hotspots or victims in smoke.

The FLIR ONE gives iPhones thermal imaging capabilities
The company's Lepton Sensor is an OEM module that is the first IR thermal microbolometer that is near the size of the small cameras made to fit into a smartphone or tablet. Unlike some thermal cameras, this small unit does not require an external cooler and has all of its image processing in a single chip. It is also compatible with FLIR's patented Multi-Spectral Dynamic Imaging Technology, which allows pixels from a visible light camera to be combined with the low resolution thermal image to create an enhanced picture.

The Lepton Sensor will be available to OEMs and developers, along with a software development kit. FLIR sees the low-cost thermal sensor being put to work in other tablets, diagnostic tools, cars, toys, building controls, assembly lines, machine vision, and medical devices, and even gaming devices for human tracking.

The FLIR ONE is compatible with iPhone 5 and 5s
Demonstrating the proof of its convictions, the company has also released the FLIR ONE. This is a packaged, consumer version of the Lepton IR sensor that takes the form of a sleeve that attaches to an Apple iPhone 5 or 5s. This could create entirely new uses for thermal cameras, as the FLIR ONE combines the thermal camera with the iPhone's abilities to capture, film, transmit, and share images.

"FLIR ONE represents a dramatic step in our pursuit of 'infrared everywhere.'" says Andy Teich, President and CEO of FLIR. "As the first truly consumer focused thermal imager, FLIR ONE introduces thermal imaging technology to a completely new group of customers."

The unit also includes extra battery power for the IR sensor and to extend the life of the smartphone, with the power pack providing about two hours of IR camera use. The FLIR ONE has two cameras – a thermal camera and a more conventional visible light camera. The special chip in the Lepton core combines the images for enhanced resolution, adding detail to the low resolution thermal image.

A worldwide rollout of the FLIR ONE is planned for the coming months, and the price point is expected to be around US$349. The FLIR ONE case will come in gray, white, or a designer gold color. An Android model is expected later in the year.

The following video demonstrates the FLIR ONE's capabilities.

Source: FLIR
 
FLIR, the largest manufacturer of thermal technologies, and the original inventor of Forward Looking Infra-Red, surprised everyone at CES this year by announcing a compact and affordable thermal imager that fits on an iPhone.

This thermal unit acts as a case for the iPhone, and works with an additional daylight camera to produce the hybrid MSX images that FLIR has patented in their industrial cameras.

The whole thing retails for $350 and has a vague Q1 release date.

The secret to the FLIR ONE’s size is it’s new Lepton core. While previous Tau Core units like the FLIR TS32 or the LS64 were similar size and dimensions to a camera lens, the Lepton is a fraction of that. It’s possibly the smallest and most cost effective thermal core ever invented.

Andy Teich, President and CEO of FLIR told the Wall Street Journal that “Lepton represents our latest, most dramatic step toward our vision of becoming ‘the world’s sixth sense.’ Not only will Lepton support an array of new imaging applications, but its revolutionary price, size, and low power consumption will open new markets for the useful information and data that thermal technology provides.”

FLIR has been very aggressive in marketing this as a thermal solution for everyone. Some of the suggestions are great, like identifying the drafty spot on your front door. Some are slightly silly: play thermally enhanced hide-and-go-seek?

I would think TFB readers would have more interest in the wildlife aspect of it, where FLIR encourages you to “see wildlife behavior in total darkness and through light foliage.”

The problem with this statement is that the thermal detector inside the FLIR ONE is very small, 80×60 pixels according to reviewers. (FLIR isn’t promoting the sensor dimensions on their current datasheets)

The great images we see in the ads are MSX images, built to blend thermal and visible light information with some image enhancing algorithms. But when the lights literally go out, the MSX images lose half of their data. In this case you’re working with the lepton alone, and I am very skeptical of its real range capability.

The FLIR Scout PS24 is their entry level outdoor unit, and uses a 240×180 micro-bolometer, which gives it a 350 yard maximum range. That’s the distance necessary for a man sized heat signature to make one pixel on the array go white. You could argue that the more effective range is closer to 100 yards where an untrained user could begin to distinguish shapes and targets.

It’s very hard to say right now what ranges the 80×60 core will provide for low-light and no-light users. Time will tell whether the FLIR ONE and its Lepton core can become a serious opto-electronic solution, or remain firmly planted in the gadget arena.



- See more at: http://www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/2014/01/13/flir-one-thermal-imager-iphone/#sthash.454DesC5.dpuf
 
Thanks for that. 80x60 is really bad. I had a look at the 240x180 and that was bad enough for me to consider it useless. However, the 640x512 LS64 international version is $6500, much more expensive. I would actually pay for LS64 30hz US version, but they export it to civilians.
 
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