Skip to main content

Point Grey Grasshopper3 camera features new Sony IMX174 sensor

Machine vision-based cameras can support many high-end transport applications. System suppliers, keen to improve access to products and potential utility, continue to work to improve performance and price point, and examples of the latest and best are on display here at Intertraffic.
March 25, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Joerg Clement leaps into action with the new Grasshopper3 camera
Machine vision-based cameras can support many high-end transport applications. System suppliers, keen to improve access to products and potential utility, continue to work to improve performance and price point, and examples of the latest and best are on display here at Intertraffic.

541 Point Grey has recently added a 2.3MP global shutter CMOS model to its Grasshopper3 family of USB3 Vision cameras. The Grasshopper3 GS3-U3-23S6M-C uses 576 Sony’s ground-breaking new IMX174 global shutter CMOS sensor, an extremely fast and sensitive 1-1.2in Exmore offering which offers an image resolution of 1,920 x 1,200 and frame rates of up to 162FPS.

Global shutter CMOS technology avoids the distortion of rolling shutter technology and offers very good smear performance. Applications include high-speed triggering and region of interest functionality. The latter allows users to select smaller HD 1080p or 720p image sizes that run at faster frame rates. Sony’s special ‘analogue memory’ technology minimises fixed pattern noise, dramatically lowering read noise to seven electrons (e-). The IMX174 offers a saturation capacity of 32,000 electrons (e-), a dynamic range of 73dB and a peak quantum efficiency of 76 percent at 525nm.

“The Grasshopper3 is the first market application of the Sony IMX174 sensor,” says Point Grey’s Regional Manager EMEA Joerg Clement. “It’s an exciting development which brings an order-of-magnitude improvement to applications such as those in the transport sector.”
%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 42378 0 oLinkAsset <span class="mouselink">www.ptgrey.com</span> Point Grey web false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=42378 false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Innovative wind guard combats distortion
    March 3, 2014
    Austrian company, Commend International, a specialist in security and communication solutions for parking and mass transit systems, will use Intertraffic Amsterdam 2014 to unveil the NoVento Wind Guard. The company says the device is an ingeniously simple solution to combat sound distortion caused by wind in help phone call connections at roadsides, toll gates, pay points, etc. A microphone attachment with a brush-like shape, the No Vento is precision crafted to dissipate noise causing wind swirls. Comme
  • Autotalks shows V2X chipset
    September 8, 2014
    The company’s integrated V2X chipset is designed for vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) and vehicle-to-infrastructure (V2I) communication applications for vehicle safety and mobility.
  • Limited places remaining for FIRM15 infrastructure meeting
    March 31, 2015
    The FEHRL Infrastructure Research Meeting 2015 (FIRM15) will be held on 22 and 23 April 2015 at the Diamant Centre in Brussels, Belgium. Held every two years, for the first time FIRM15 is opening up to all transport modes with speakers and participants from the rail sector. With the theme of ‘Innovative maintenance of Transport Infrastructure: Faster, cheaper, more reliable, safer and greener’, FIRM15 aims at mapping the problems and challenges of innovative maintenance of transport infrastructure;
  • Flir thermal sensors aid police in capturing Boston bombing suspect
    April 23, 2013
    Last Monday morning two bomb blasts went off near the finish line of the Boston Marathon. By Friday night the suspect, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, was in police custody. After he survived a gunfight with police and slipped out of a dragnet, Massachusetts State Police finally spotted him via a thermal imaging technology manufactured by Flir.