Skip to main content

High-speed Gazelle

The Gazelle camera series from Point Grey debuts with 2.2 and 4.1 megapixel monochrome models based on the high sensitivity CMOSIS CMV2000 and CMV4000 global shutter CMOS sensors. With a Camera Link digital interface in Base (2-tap) and Full (8-tap) configurations, the 2.2 megapixel model outputs 2048x1088 resolution images at a maximum rate of 280 FPS, while the 4.1 megapixel model outputs 2048x2048 images at 150 FPS.
January 25, 2012 Read time: 1 min
The Gazelle camera series from Point Grey
The Gazelle camera series from 541 Point Grey debuts with 2.2 and 4.1 megapixel monochrome models based on the high sensitivity CMOSIS CMV2000 and CMV4000 global shutter CMOS sensors. With a Camera Link digital interface in Base (2-tap) and Full (8-tap) configurations, the 2.2 megapixel model outputs 2048x1088 resolution images at a maximum rate of 280 FPS, while the 4.1 megapixel model outputs 2048x2048 images at 150 FPS.

The Gazelle features the same compact housing as Point Grey's popular Grasshopper camera, which measures just 44 x 29 x 58 mm in size. A host of features are included for customising imaging applications, including opto-isolated GPIO for industrial triggering and strobe output, pixel binning and region of interest modes, and user configuration sets for custom default settings.

Related Content

  • March 21, 2018
    Laser Technology launches TruCam II
    Laser Technology arrives in Amsterdam sporting an all-new LTI 20/20 TruCam II hand-held laser-based speed enforcement system with photo and video capability for enforcement of approaching and departing vehicles at speeds up to 320km/h. A key enhancement is the use of a bespoke camera featuring ‘point and shoot’ imaging with auto focus, iris and shutter speed selection.
  • March 11, 2021
    VuWall and Samsung tech for control rooms
    VuWall says VuScape can power up to 96 displays in transport control environments
  • October 25, 2018
    Teledyne Dalsa showcases 5-Gigabit, GigE vision models
    Teledyne Dalsa’s 5-Gigabit, GigE Vision cameras are intended for imaging applications which require high-speed data transfer. The company says the new cameras can replace existing units built into current vision systems which rely on the existing GigE vision interface standard. The Genie Nano cameras are built around Sony image sensors and are expected to offer resolutions from 3.2Mpixels to 12Mpixels - with more models to follow by the end of the year, the firm says. Also, the cameras feature the new 5G
  • September 23, 2024
    TrafiBot Dual AI camera has tunnel vision
    Multispectral system automates incident detection and delivers early fire detection