Skip to main content

Theia lenses bring it all together

Theia Technologies’ IQ Lens System has motor control board & calibration data with SDK & GUI
September 1, 2024 Read time: 3 mins
Public transport is just one of the applications for Theia's lenses

Theia Technologies’ IQ Lens System brings together a motorised lens, motor control board, calibration data, with SDK and GUI to form a modular, highly configurable system. Until recently, users needed to develop their own motor control software. 

Theia’s IQ Lens System software application and intuitive graphical user interface saves the user considerable development effort and cost, speeding time to market. The IQ Lens calibration data provides intelligence that enables optimal image quality and easy imaging system setup. The compact, lightweight varifocal lens and motor control board provide for remote operation in hard to reach or mobile environments. Combined, these elements allow for convenient and cost-effective integration into the imaging system.  

Theia’s motorised lenses use stepper motors to operate the zoom, focus, iris, and integrated NIR filters of the lens. The lenses provide the ability to adjust the zoom and focus remotely, avoiding costly field calibration and traffic disruptions. 

Theia’s new IQ Lens System comes with a software application for easy integration into the imaging system. The software automatically converts engineering units into motor steps, using Theia’s available lens control library and graphical user interface allowing users to set a field of view, depth of field, or object distance without the need for external calculations, curve fitting, and interpolation. 

The system also includes the MCR IQ Motor Control Board with software application and GUI to convert motor steps into machine commands that move the lens to the desired position. The board communicates via USB, UART, or i2c protocols for integration flexibility. Purchase of the IQ Lens and Board includes royalty free licences to use the applications, both available as Python modules for program development. 

Theia’s IQ Lens System provides calibration data with a measured average zoom/focus tracking curve which can be used to quickly find focus after changing zoom position. Knowing this relationship allows the user to remotely programme the focus and zoom motor position, enabling image optimisation in difficult-to-access cameras such as traffic gantries in ITS. 

The IQ Lens System also provides focal length calibration allowing the user to know the relationship between focal length and zoom motor step position. This allows for accurate field of view setup enabling imaging systems requiring variable camera positions or object distances such as mobile speed cameras, where field of view and object distance change. 

Included with the IQ Lens are design data common across lenses in the same family. This includes aperture size for lighting control in dynamic outdoor environments such as ANPR, geometrical distortion data that enables positional corrections for multiple focal lengths, and relative illumination allowing adjustment at different focal lengths and F/# settings for applications needing uniformly exposed scenes. 

The data is available for download from Theia’s cloud database with application notes for using the data.

Theia’s lightweight, compact IQ Lens System with motorised varifocal lens, motor control board, calibration data, and software provide convenience, flexibility, and optimized image quality in a cost-effective package to support demanding ITS applications. 

Fast. Intelligent. Cost-effective. Just plain smart!

Content produced in association with Theia Technologies

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Parifex highlights 3D Lidar tech
    March 4, 2022
    Parifex, a leading solution provider in project management for speed enforcement and smart cities, will highlight three innovations including 3D-lidar technology: the Double-Side Vigie, an extra-urban speed control system; the Nano-Cam, an innovative sensor for mobile real-time data collection and speed enforcement such as vehicle counting and classification; as well as the Nomad, a multi-infringement sensor designed to fit in the urban infrastructure.
  • Integrate systems to reduce roadside infrastructure
    January 27, 2012
    David Crawford reviews promising current developments. Instrumentation of the road infrastructure has grown to become one of the most dynamic sectors of the ITS industry. Drivers for its deployment include global concerns over the commercial and environmental pressures of traffic congestion, the importance of keeping drivers informed throughout their journeys, and the need to reduce accident rates and promote the safety of all road users, for example by enforcing traffic safety rules.
  • Vision technology lifts blinkers from tunnel vision
    December 6, 2017
    Sony’s Jerome Avenel looks at how advances in imaging technology are helping improve safety. On the 24th March 1999, a Belgian truck transporting flour and margarine through the 11.6km Mont Blanc tunnel caught alight when a cigarette stub entered the engine induction snorkel, lighting the paper air filter. The fire left over 30 dead and many more injured. At the time, the Mont Blanc tunnel disaster was the world’s worst tunnel fire.
  • Caltrans develops remote remedy for ailing VMS
    February 18, 2014
    A remote diagnostic system for variable message signs keeps Caltrans staff safer and makes them more efficient. District 12 of the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) maintains roads in Orange County including 292 route miles of freeway lanes and 240 directional miles of full-time high occupancy vehicle or carpool lanes. All of these lanes are controlled from the district’s transportation management centre (TMC) using a network of 58 variable message signs (VMS) positioned alongside or abo