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Multi-camera plug and play from Tattille

Tattile’s M100 multi-camera vision controllers are plug and play industrial PCs specially designed, developed and manufactured by Tattile for use with vision systems. The fan Less systems require minimum maintenance and are guaranteed for ten years
October 29, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
M100GigE

Tattile’s M100 multi-camera vision controllers are plug and play industrial PCs specially designed, developed and manufactured by Tattile for use with vision systems. The fan Less systems require minimum maintenance and are guaranteed for ten years

The M100 GigE multi-camera vision controller has six GigE ports which can be connected to 592 Tattile’s or other compatible manufacturers’ cameras. Up to four USB3.0 cameras may be connected, providing the user with a wide range of applications.

All ports are independent, each with its own direct connection to the CPU and all are Power over Ethernet (PoE), allowing the cameras to be powered directly through the Ethernet cable connection without the need for extra power cables.

The M100 CameraLink multicamera vision controller has four camera link ports that can be connected to Tattile’s or other manufacturers’ cameras, providing maximum flexibility for users.

It supports base, medium, full and Deca protocols; up to four cameras can be connected in base mode or two in other modes.

All ports are directly connected to an FPGA of 160K logic elements that manage the image acquisition and preprocessing; users are able to easily and independently programme it via graphical software.

All ports are Power over Camera Link (PoCL), requiring only one cable for power supply, data and image transmission. In addition, two USB3.0 cameras may be connected.

Both systems utilise the latest generation Intel processors (i3 or i7, depending on the user’s requirements) and Windows Embedded Standard 7 (WES7) or Linux operating systems.

Open architecture design allows the user to develop vision applications using Tattile’s software platform or other manufacturers’ software libraries or to use a previously developed programme.

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