Infrared Webcam HOWTO 238
Geoff Johnson writes "Some of the Slashdot readers may be interested in this page I put together. It describes how to make an ordinary webcam see in the near infrared waveband."
FORTRAN is not a flower but a weed -- it is hardy, occasionally blooms, and grows in every computer. -- A.J. Perlis
duh (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:duh (Score:5, Informative)
Re:duh (Score:5, Informative)
Full colour (maybe a tiny bit washed out because of the extra IR) during daylight, and at night switch on the IR light and you've got an IR camera.
Near IR isn't that interesting, except humans cant see it, what would be cool is if the chips could pickup far IR so you could see heat.
Re:duh (Score:5, Interesting)
Sooner or later someone is going to hack the system for some serious geek factor. I could see someone hackering several of these different systems together for some cool false-color IR video. I used to do quite a bit of IR photography used Kodak's IR false-color slide film, green showed up as blue, red was green and IR was red if memory serves me correctly. The biggest problem was the film used the old-fassioned E4 process, so you either had to send it to Kodak or do it your self
Re:duh (Score:5, Informative)
The alternative to BST is microbolometer technology, developed by Lockheed Martin / BAE Systems and others. A microbolometer array consists of vanadium-oxide bridges that vary their resistance when exposed to thermal radiation. The scene will occasionally need to be "shuttered" (i.e., zero all the pixels against the back of a shutter mechanism to cancel the thermal drift that creeps in over time.)
Unlike light-amp, true thermal imaging allows you to see in complete darkness. And unlike projected-IR, it isn't limited in range by any kind of IR-transmitter. And unlike either of those technologies, it allows you to very quickly find humans (or other mammals) in a scene, and it allows you to see where things used to be by the heat-shadow that they've left.
Re:duh (Score:2)
No idea if that works with normal film or not..
Re:duh (Score:3, Informative)
False Color (Score:2)
False Color means applying a dye that is proportional to exposure and it may or may not represent reality. Since we have 3 sensitivities (Excluding night vision) we have three discreet channels for image processing at the same time.
Biggest problem: When Green Grass comes out White because it is IR reflective. Thats when analysts have a fit :
Did it to my 300D (Digital Rebel) (Score:3, Interesting)
Great shots, too
1st test shot here: http://www.deviantart.com/deviation/12473546/ [deviantart.com]
Re:duh (Score:2)
Re:duh (Score:3, Informative)
I I've used purple sweet wrappers in an IR remote control, and often the plastic in the housing is good enough to block most visible light but pass IR.
Re:duh (Score:2)
Re:duh (Score:2)
Re:Infrared Technology and the Chinese Threat (Score:4, Interesting)
It might make the fight more interesting.
Oh, great. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Oh, great. (Score:3, Insightful)
Not recommended when planet imaging.
~X~
Can it see through clothing? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Can it see through clothing? (Score:2)
Re:Can it see through clothing? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Can it see through clothing? (Score:2)
Re:Can it see through clothing? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Can it see through clothing? (Score:2)
Here you go: http://www.dict.org/bin/Dict?Form=Dict2&Database=
Re:Can it see through clothing? (Score:5, Informative)
This was covered on slashdot a long time agao.
But yes, it can see through [kaya-optics.com] clothing to some extent.
Re:Can it see through clothing? (Score:3, Funny)
(and panties
infrared wecam! (Score:5, Funny)
Night Vision Linux Webcams All the Rage? (Score:4, Interesting)
I do wonder what the most common applications for Linux/IrDA are, considering the trend I've observed where among the most commonly requested Linux HOWTOs [joeldalley.com] recently have been 'laptop', 'infrared' and 'webcam'. Is everyone building infrared webcams?
Re: IrDA != infrared webcam (Score:2, Funny)
Maybe you're confused here, and should check out some of those HOWTO's yourself (and read the article for once), to see what it is all about?
To use a webcam for looking in the infrared spectrum, is not the same as using infrared light for shortrange communicati
cached link of video if it dies. (Score:5, Informative)
The WEcam... (Score:4, Interesting)
SCNR... sometimes I'm amazed at what kinds of typos make it through to the frontpage.
But besides that, very nice article. I personally found IR very useful for some surveillance-type situations. A few years ago, my father set up an IR-sensitive camera and an IR diode in a birdhouse in our garden, which allowed us to watch the new-born ones without creating any disturbance.
Burgler Cam?? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Burgler Cam?? (Score:2)
With an alerting burglar cam/alarm. The guy sees that he's been spotted, freaks out, and leaves. You keep your stuff.
I guess your choice depends on your priorities.
Re:Burgler Cam?? (Score:4, Insightful)
For example, using your example of a car - I'd consider myself a madman if I opted not only to have a car alarm - but also to make it as obvious as possible that I am equipped with one. The snag, however with alerting alarms is that after a few "false alarms" it is widely understood that alarms signals will be ignored - people assume it is a technical fault... and the criminals know this too. Another problem with the alerting alarm is in automatically deciding at what point to take issue with someone's actions. For example, I'm aware of areas in which organised youths check all the car doors in a neighbourhood - hoping someone has forgotten to lock and alarm their car. Under these circumstances an alarm system does no good... It is important to discriminate... Burglar alarms also offer no protection from vandals - whereas a CCTV with night vision may well do - if only by identifying weaknesses in manned security. I imagine an infra-red video surveillance system would be an extremely good way to improve security for applications such as monitoring business car parks; monitoring entranceways to identify where layabouts trespass before any real harm occurs - as well as providing some way to counter graffiti tagging and other illegal unpleasantness.
I've long thought this would be a fun project - but as yet I've not found time to tinker.
Re:Burgler Cam?? (Score:2)
As illustrated in
How to steal a million [imdb.com] movie...
Paul B.
Re:Burgler Cam?? (Score:2)
I know when you secure car stereo equipment frustrated theives end up cutting speakers and ruining wire runs.
Re:Burgler Cam?? (Score:2, Informative)
A couple of months ago a guy in rural San Diego did exactly that and nabbed some identity thieves stealing folk's mail from their mailboxes at night. Here's the story from the San Diego Union Tribune:
http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/sandiego/ [pqarchiver.com]
Re:Burgler Cam?? (Score:3, Informative)
Use this camera [supercircuits.com], illuminate with this device [supercircuits.com] and use a C-mount lens from this page [surplusshed.com] if you are comfortable with removing the electronic iris in some of these older, but superb qulity, lenses.
You will be able to read a license plate at 75 feet in complete darkness.
Re:Burgler Cam?? (Score:2)
6.9Mb DivX AVI file (Score:2, Funny)
IR filter (Score:2, Interesting)
Not all cheap webcams have filters. (Score:5, Informative)
You may want to check it with a remote (or just put your IR passing filter in front of it) before you take it apart.
Re:Not all cheap webcams have filters. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Not all cheap webcams have filters. (Score:2)
Re:Not all cheap webcams have filters. (Score:2)
Re:Not all cheap webcams have filters. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Not all cheap webcams have filters. (Score:2)
Many high-end web-cams have day/night and pan/tilt (Score:2, Informative)
Pan/tilt/zoom control, day night filter (changes to IR/Night mode on a schedule)... Plus 26x optical zoom rocks.
NuSpectra has a demo camera out of their office in San Francisco.. See demo in upper right corner of page [nuspectra.com].
We also use the SiteProxy software that lets us build time-lapse movies from all the camera's preset positions on the fly.
Check em out!
Re:Many high-end web-cams have day/night and pan/t (Score:2)
Wow, but the important part, and hard part to get in most cases, is a good IR lightsource that can illuminate a big enough area, particularly if you want to use a cam like this for security.
Look at these prices though! http://www.nuspectra.com/SearchResult.aspx?Catego
Re:Many high-end web-cams have day/night and pan/t (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Many high-end web-cams have day/night and pan/t (Score:2)
Where can I get such a light, and such a filter? Hopefully for a reasonable ($100 total) price?
Re:Many high-end web-cams have day/night and pan/t (Score:2)
Well, maybe not so subtle. I'm noticing this more and more around here lately.
The effects of IR on follicles (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:The effects of IR on follicles (Score:2, Informative)
This webcam mod is pretty cool, but only for us normal folk without $40,000 to spend on a REAL thermal camera.
Re:DNA (Score:2)
OK..... (Score:5, Funny)
The day is still young... (Score:5, Funny)
Give it time...
Re:The day is still young... (Score:2)
Now I play Rifts, though I'd prefer to play Cyberpunk 2020.
Re:The day is still young... (Score:2)
Re:The day is still young... (Score:2)
this is true of almost all modern cameras.. (Score:5, Interesting)
you would remove the CCD, then remove the 'piece of glass' from it.
some cameras achieve this effect differently, I have not quite worked out how they work.
For example, Sony camcorders that have 'nightshot'
also have an IR filter, but I suspect its something different. the switch not only engages some IR illuminators, but does something in the lens block itself. (switches something in/out mechanically)
I know that the IR filter at the CCD remains there, its in a fixed position.
I am now curious and have to dissasemble a sony lens block to see
I used to work on cameras, and I have removed the IR filters on cameras before for a bit of fun.
if you can get enough IR leds going you can get it pretty well lit.
Altho, the resolution is probably not going to be that great at a distance.
X-Ray Specs (Score:4, Funny)
One question (Score:4, Funny)
(it's funny, laugh)
Heat Seeker (Score:3, Funny)
Look for heat loss? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Look for heat loss? (Score:2)
The type of camera you want has a cooled detector/sensor. The early versions used a vial you would fill with liquid nitrogen. High pressure argon allowed to expand into a cooling chamber was also used. Modern cameras use a peltier type cooler to chill the detector.
About 10K new, several are listed on Ebay for much less.
Re:Look for heat loss? (Score:3, Informative)
Granted, these are all intended for structural firefighting, so they aren't cheap. But they *are* intended to be dropped, kicked, and roasted. Obviously, you'll trade weight for battery life and heat shielding - the Draegers have full Ni cladding and ca
trashed my kensington videocam (Score:4, Funny)
it then proceeded to fall over due to the usb cable coming free in back.
I now have a little stack of lenses that I need to figure out the proper way to orient.
2 lenses - 2 ways = 8 combinations.
a third lense further out = x2 more combinations.
a fourth lense on the outsite = x2 more combinations.
Total 32 possible ways to re-assemble this little bugger!! DAMN-YOU!!!!
Worst of it is, the pink lense is a lense and not a flat glass filter. I cant use this cam
Anyone have a blow-up of this cam -
Kensington VideoCAM VGA PC Camera
Model#67015
Re:trashed my kensington videocam (Score:2)
the spacers make it even worse!!
up to 128 combinations!!!
I could get an assembled one from ebay sooner than I will figure this out!
Hack to bits your remote,,, (Score:2)
And then you can use the IR cam, with a constant IR source and see in the dark, presumably.
But I'll have to wait another few hours to test that.
Re:Hack to bits your remote... (Score:3, Funny)
Pictures are in this thread [sudhian.com].
I'd post a pic of the setup.. But I'm ashamed of it. Sellotaping wires to a battery just isn't
Disgruntled ISP customer? (Score:4, Funny)
The ~7MB video file at the end of the page doesn't even have anything to do with IR video. It's like he wants us to take the server down.
So do him a favor and just download it 8 times.
Re:Disgruntled ISP customer? (Score:2)
Yes, to some extent it is related, but not really.
* Soccer. n. football
If you want a time-lapse capture app for free... (Score:4, Interesting)
...Get one here: http://www.mair-family.org/Downloads/ [mair-family.org] Geoff says the software he had isn't very good. I couldn't find anything I was prepared to pay for so I wrote my own and publish it at that link. Sorry Windows only and WMV output. You can read the feature list for yourself but, in terms of Geoff's difficulty, it will capture frames at between 4s and one hour per-frame (configurable) and create a 15fps WMV.
Go ahead, /. my web server...Hopefully my ISP is tolerant.
See through clothes! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:See through clothes! (Score:3, Informative)
See through camera (Score:2, Informative)
Was their fix to add IR filters?
Too bad you can't come up with... (Score:2)
or maybe I like image formats to much.
alternative approach (Score:5, Funny)
Re:alternative approach (Score:2)
Re:alternative approach (Score:2)
To move 310K (body temp) to visible light (at least 3100K) we need a factor of 10 incre
Oh man. (Score:2)
Warning: state of USB webcams on linux (Score:3, Informative)
Indeed the usb chipset is supported (sn9c103), but the sensor isn't. So I'm sending it off to Italy for Luca the developer, well it's no use to me.
USB webcams can have different sensors within the exact same model, so you never really know when buying one whether it will work for sure.
Hopefully this will change if the USB video standard (similar to firewire video standard), comes about.
In the mean-time think about firewire cameras.
Sell one to me (Score:2)
tried it(using just swiss) but whitout the film (Score:2, Informative)
Now just good lighting. I have a bicycle led-light with individual lences for each led. One of these with proper leds might work nicely as home surveillance system.
But sure was
This is great (Score:2, Interesting)
Tomorrow on Slashdot... (Score:3, Funny)
Oh dear... (Score:2)
Done. (Score:2)
Did the same thing to a Kodak CX6300 and a CX7300; they detected it.
All I need to do is filter the visible light, no screwing around...or unscrewing.
Affordable Thermography (Score:2)
Subject (Score:2)
Re:Infrared (Score:2, Funny)
Re:IR webcam ok, but... (Score:2, Interesting)
That's the guy thinking "before f*cking up my webcam to remove the IR lens, I'll do something normal with it so I won't feel so bad when it ends up dead on my table". His hack worked, so he posts both...
Re:IR webcam ok, but... (Score:2)
I don't think NTL limit bandwidth to their ISP provided webspace though, which this guy is using.
For information only, NTL provide cable to most of the North of England. My 1.5Mb (soon to be 3Mb at no extra cost) Hasn't let me down once in 2 years, since I got the standalone cable modem rather than the crappy set top box that did TV badly too.
Re:makezine covered this also (Score:2)
Re: makezine, ob. They Live reference (Score:2, Funny)
Re:WEcam HOWTO? (Score:5, Funny)
Hence the HOWTO, duh!
Re:The fun of spelling! (Score:2)
Actually, it's Uscam.
Re:China steals... (Score:2)
Re:The fun of spelling! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Infrared Technology and the Chinese Threat (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:This is cool, but..... (Score:2)
Some sensors are more sensitive than others however.
The problem is, the lower the sensitivity the longer the exposure needs to be to create an image. Most webcams can only expose for a few seconds or less. So you'd have better luck with a digital slr camera.
You'd probably still need to modify the camera by removing it's cut/IR/antialiasing filter and replace it with UV pass filter.
There are a few places on the web that will perform this se