Posts Tagged ‘megapixel cameras’

Pentax Varifocal Plus Megapixel CCTV Lens

Monday, June 8th, 2009

The new Pentax Varifocal Plus megapixel CCTV lens as captured in action at IFSEC 2009:




Pentax are well known for the quality of their CCTV lenses, but they have taken a long time to produce and launch their first megapixel CCTV lens. However, it seems that the wait may have been worthwhile as judging by the pre-production model demonstrated at IFSEC they’ve built in a new feature which might well see them take the lead in this sector.

Firstly, let’s explain what a vari-focal CCTV lens is – it is simply a lens which allows you to manually adust the field of view being monitored by the camera to exactly that which you wish your surveillance to cover.

Once upon a time we only had fixed focal length lenses available to us e.g. 4mm, 8mm,12mm, etc. These lenses provided a certain field of view, perhaps a horizontal viewing angle of 60° and that was what you got i.e. the view could not be adjusted. A set focal length lens provides a fixed field of view (horizontal and vertical viewing angle).

With the advent of the varifocal CCTV lens we were able to adjust the scene covered / field of view at the point of commissioning, so that only the area which we wished to cover was ’seen’ by the camera. This allowed us to concentrate all of the camera’s available resolution onto the important area. For this reason vari-focal lenses are now used in the vast majority of all new CCTV installations.

With all of the currently available vari-focal lenses, as the field of view is adjusted, you then need to re-focus the lens at each scene setting. With their new ‘Varifocal Plus’ lens Pentax have developed technology which allows the lens to stay in focus as you manually zoom.

The guys on the stand weren’t revealing too much about how Pentax had achieved this first, they simply said that it utilised technology transfer from their lenses for the Digital Single Lens Reflex (DSLR) camera market.

Precise focusing of CCTV camera lens combinations is something which many end-users struggle with, so this new lens from Pentax should bring great benefit to many end-users and field engineers.Pentax Varifocal Plus Megapixel CCTV Lens

It’s a 1.3 megapixel lens and should be available Q3 2009 for a price in the region of just £99!

Click the image to the right to visit the new page in our webshop and to download the datasheet from there for further information.

NB This lens will only work with cameras which have a lens connection socket and can be back-focused with an adjuster ring at the front of the camera (if you need any further help or information then give us a call on 01304 827 609).

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WYSIWYG CCTV

Thursday, January 8th, 2009

Traditional CCTV security cameras provide WYSIWYG results.

Traditional CCTV is WYSIWYG

WYSIWYG = What You See Is What You Get

In an era when the general public are well practised at snapping away with compact digital cameras (and even with their mobile phones), and ending up with multi-megapixel images which they can later crop, enlarge, enhance, etc. it is frustrating to capture images that you cannot improve.

The above image is captured from a fresh crime in Bolton.

It’s a good image.

The focus is good.

The subject is large.

The field of view (width of scene) is not too great.

The colour rendition seems good.

There are more images at the Lancashire News website.

You can almost see a lot of detail inside the shop.

But still the Police are unable to recognise or identify the individuals – Police are appealing for anybody who might recognise the men in the pictures:

I would appeal to anyone who recognises the clothing

If you’d captured these stills with your multi-megapixel compact digital hand-held point & shoot camera you’d just zoom-in to the captured image and reveal their faces, but with traditional CCTV (even if it’s recorded on a hard disc based digital video recorder DVR) there is no more detail to be had.

What you see is what was captured and recorded.

Zooming-in will just move the limited number of pixels apart.

Scotland Yard could do no more with it.

There is no ‘more’.

The best traditional CCTV security cameras can deliver a maximum of only 0.4 megapixels.

Very often only 50% of that original maximum image quality is actually recorded.

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Avigilon dome camera launched

Thursday, December 11th, 2008

Avigilon have announced a new range of vandal-resistant megapixel dome cameras.

These new Avigilon HD colour/mono domes will be available in 1, 2, 3 and 5 mpix camera models as per their current HD body camera range.

There will also be a range of variants with built-in IR LEDs for night-time illumination.

We’re anticipating that these new products will deliver a great new value proposition; as VR domes they include the camera, lens and outdoor housing all in a single easy-to-install, POE-enabled, IP camera package.

Just as soon as the full information and datasheets become available we’ll add these fantastic new products into our IP CCTV shop.

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Megapixel CCTV cameras for under £140

Friday, October 10th, 2008

Megapixel CCTV cameras are often dismissed as an expensive technology, beyond the budgets of ordinary end-user applications.

Take a look at this video clip from the ACTi ACM-4200 Megapixel Cube Camera.

It’s a 1.3 Megapixel network camera. 1.3 megapixels is three times the image resolution of the traditional CCTV cameras watching over your Reception area or shop!

Simply connect it to the nearest network point and record the video on a PC (ACTi provide their NVR Professional video recording software free-of-charge on a CD in the box with each camera – for use with up to 64 cameras!).

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IP CCTV Video Clips in High Quality Player by SmugMug

Friday, August 29th, 2008

At use-IP we are very keen that you should have the opportunity to be able to appreciate product performance before you have to make your purchase decision.

We realise that we are in the vanguard of IP CCTV and megapixel security cameras, we have a point to prove and we’ll do all we can to demonstrate it to you. Megapixel IP cameras ARE the future of CCTV.

We see some great high-definition video clips from megapixel cameras, but not everybody browsing our website is going to be keen to download the manufacturer’s player software onto their PC and run their own demo with the footage provided.

So, we’re pleased to announce that we have found a high-quality video clip player that does a really good job of delivering that compromise between performance, image quality and patience. Please realise that nothing that we can easily host online and present to you on your own PC via the web will be quite as good as using the manufacturer’s player locally. Most online video services, such as YouTube, Flickr, Google Video, just do not even come close.

use-IP have set up a SmugMug Pro Account to showcase our video clips. SmugMug is probably THE preferred online photo album showcase for professional photographers – they care about quality of image, and quality of service.

We’re really pleased with the initial playback performance results that we are seeing. The video images that you will see played back from our SmugMug Pro account are probably the best comparison playback clips for CCTV performance that you’ll find anywhere on the web!!

As we said above, they are a slight compromise to video delivery performance – they will take a little time to download and play, but you would probably not be willing to wait for the full file sizes which we uploaded.

You’ll be interested to learn that SmugMug use H.264 video compresssion to achieve this web playback performance.

You can adjust some playback settings and choose what size you want to view the clip at.

One great feature that’s built-in for the pro photographers, but we spotted and loved straight away is the ‘Smugloupe’ – if you switch your view of our album to ‘Critique’ – using the dropdown at the top RHS of the page. The clip preview images will be presented one at a time, above the preview you’ll see a tick box for the smugloupe; tick this and you will have a 4.5X magnifying glass that you can move around the image with to checkout a better idea of the available resolution in the image.

We have opened our SmugMug album with video clips from the ACTi ACM-1231, we will of course add further clips from other cameras in due course (but if we’re entirely honest it was the need to show to all of you the fantastic footage achieved from this camera that spurred us on to find this solution!).

Without further ado, you can visit the product page in our web shop to see how we’ll be featuring these video clips:

ACTi ACM-1231

Or, go straight to our use-IP SmugMug Album

As always, we look forward to your comments and feedback:

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