Waveshare's Latest Sensor Adds a Thermal Camera to Your Raspberry Pi — or Any Device with a USB Port - Hackster.io
Waveshare's Latest Sensor Adds a Thermal Camera to Your Raspberry Pi — or Any Device with a USB Port - Hackster.io
New sensors available with a 40-pin GPIO header for Raspberry Pi and compatibles or a USB Type-C connector for everything else.
Here's a $120usd FLIR - how does it compare with a cheap plug in USB phone module?
Guess it's just missing a mounting case?
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80x62 pixels, there are already other cheaper sensors in this range. FLIR is way more expensive but has much higher res.
20 0 ReplyCan you provide some links or something? I desire to own a thermal camera but they are just so expensive.
I don't need anything fancy but higher res would obviously be cooler.
10 0 ReplyHere's a higher res gizmo ($300+):
4 0 ReplyOh, that looks pretty dang good.
300 USD is probably a bit too much for me to spend on something that I have no real use for but its very neat.
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https://www.sparkfun.com/search/results?term=flir
Actually the flir lepton is not so high res either. Try digikey for higher res and higher priced modules.
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Btw, why is that? It's not just a CCD in infrared wavelength? Or is it the thermal decoupling part?
2 0 ReplyNo they are not CCD, they use microbolometers whatever those are. CCD IR sensors are for near infrared only, not the much longer thermal wavelengths.
4 0 ReplyAh, thanks.
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I'm curious to see what the quality is like. If it's a similar case to the Enviro hat, and gives good reliable results for less, fantastic.
If it's like the other cheapie thermal sensors on alibaba, less so.2 0 Reply