Skip to main content

Point Grey: redefining value performance

Canadian manufacturer of high-performance digital cam­eras Point Grey has begun producing its new Blackfly cam­era, which the company says is suited to applications in open road tolling and machine vision. The first model, the BLFY-PGE-13E4, features a 1.3MP, 60fps, CMOS global shutter sensor available in both monochrome and colour, and consumes less than two watts of power in what the company claims is the world’s smallest and lightest GigE Pow­er over Ethernet (PoE) camera package. Future Blackfly models
March 1, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Canadian manufacturer of high-performance digital cam­eras 541 Point Grey has begun producing its new Blackfly cam­era, which the company says is suited to applications in open road tolling and machine vision.

The first model, the BLFY-PGE-13E4, features a 1.3MP, 60fps, CMOS global shutter sensor available in both monochrome and colour, and consumes less than two watts of power in what the company claims is the world’s smallest and lightest GigE Pow­er over Ethernet (PoE) camera package.

Future Blackfly models include 0.5 and 0.9 MP CCD resolutions with high quantum efficiency and wide dynamic range.

The BFLY-PGE-13E4 model uses the EV76C560 CMOS sensor from e2v, which uses a global shutter readout architecture to prevent geomet­ric distortion when capturing images of fast moving objects.

The CMOS pixel design addresses blooming and smear­ing artifacts caused by bright sources or reflections in the camera’s field of view. Point Grey says the BFLY-PGE­13E4 is deal for cost-sensitive applications in automation, 3D imaging or license plate recognition.

The Blackfly camera meas­ures just 29 x 29 x 30mm and provides features including tem­perature and status monitoring, in-field updatable firmware, colour interpolation, look-up table, gamma correction, and a pixel binning function.

“The Blackfly camera is generating huge interest in the industry by addressing customer demand for modern sensor technology, small foot­print and an attractive price point,” comments Michael Gibbons, director of sales and marketing. “We are excited to address traditional machine vision, 3D imaging, automated inspection, open road tolling and many new and future ap­plications with the camera.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Flir debuts new deep learning Firefly camera
    October 25, 2018
    At this year’s Vision show, Flir debuts the world’s first industrial camera supporting on-camera inference. The new Flir Firefly camera combines the best of machine vision with the power of deep learning. At just 27mm x 27mm x 14mm, 20 grammes weight, and 1.5W power consumption, it is ideal for portable devices. Excellent imaging is provided with the latest global shutter CMOS sensors, the company says. And, Flir adds, with its integrated Intel Movidius Myriad 2 vision processing unit (VPU), users deploy th
  • Theia’s compact 4K telephoto lenses
    May 1, 2022
    Portfolio is particularly good in NIR illumination with only a five micron focus shift
  • CMOS cameras used to create video pedestrian crossing
    June 11, 2013
    The city of Cologne, Germany has installed two CMOS-camera based video pedestrian light systems that will recognise waiting pedestrians and extend the green phase if there are still people crossing after the standard time allocation. The system, implemented by Siemens, uses two Flir cameras. The safe walk camera observes the waiting area. A stereo camera with two CMOS 1/3-inch mono sensors and 3 mm lenses is mounted 3.5 metres above the ground to cover an area of 12 sq m. This camera is set to recognise on
  • SVS-Vistek launches new 12MP camera range
    March 26, 2014
    Product enhancement and new launches feature on the SVS-Vistek stand. The company’s Tracer series of cameras now features better heat management a customer-requested improvements to casings’ screw fixings. But alongside improvements sits something wholly new – the SVCam-evo 12040. This is a CMOS-based camera, available in 12MP versions, which offers capabilities – high blooming suppression, low image lag and dynamic range – which matches those of CCD-based rivals, said the company’s Roland Maier.