Skip to main content

Teledyne Dalsa’s Linea cameras for railway safety

Designed for demanding railway safety applications, Teledyne Dalsa’s Linea line scan cameras offer excellent sensitivity and speed. Compact, resilient and robust, their smallruggedized enclosure allows for easy integration and is built to withstand harsh environmental conditions. Linea cameras take full advantage of GigE technology, transmitting data over standard CAT-5e and CAT-6 cables to distances of up to 100m, allowing for a greater distance between the camera and inspection system.
October 28, 2016 Read time: 1 min

Designed for demanding railway safety applications, 593 Teledyne Dalsa’s Linea line scan cameras offer excellent sensitivity and speed. Compact, resilient and robust, their smallruggedized enclosure allows for easy integration and is built to withstand harsh environmental conditions. Linea cameras take full advantage of GigE technology, transmitting data over standard CAT-5e and CAT-6 cables to distances of up to 100m, allowing for a greater distance between the camera and inspection system.

Advanced features include meta data which informs the user at every line of important camera status (exposure time, I/O state, etc.), and Teledyne Dalsa’s proprietary TurboDrive technology allows Linea GigE to deliver its full image quality at line rates up to 80 kHz with no changes to the user’s GigE network.

Related Content

  • June 30, 2016
    IR’s invisible benefit for traffic surveillance and enforcement
    Advances in vision technology are enhancing traffic surveillance and enforcement applications. Variable lighting conditions have long been a stumbling block for vision technology applications in the transport sector. With applications such as ANPR, the read-rate may vary between daylight and night and can be adversely affected by glare and low sun. Madrid, Spain-based Lector Vision had these considerations in mind when designing its Traffic Eye ANPR system, which combines off-the-shelf and custom hardware
  • December 20, 2024
    Huawei addresses congested, separated rail networks with cloud solution
    A shift to a cloud-based operating regime solves the problems of trying to make cluttered, geographically-discrete terrestrial systems work together
  • August 17, 2022
    Teledyne has eyes on Çanakkale Bridge
    Teledyne Flir’s incident detection cameras cover length of 4.6km Turkish bridge
  • July 29, 2013
    Weathering the elements: how weather affects the network
    Weather-related problems can render cost-cutting counter productive, according to CommScope’s Philip Sorrells. When severe weather conditions make headlines every winter, motorists and travellers seem willing to accept the impact on the trains and roads and yet take for granted that the communications networks will continue uninterrupted. They often appear far more upset that the information system does not give them an update on road conditions, train services or bus arrival times than they are about the a