Results 1 to 14 of 14
Thread: Full Color Night Vision
-
11 April 2017, 15:44 #1
Full Color Night Vision
"SPI, a Las Vegas-based company, has developed a revolutionary night vision sensor called the X27. But what makes the X27 so advanced? Well, just to begin with, this ultra-sensitive sensor is able to shoot both ordinary images during the day as well as full-color night-vision images."
Link is listed below.
http://tribunist.com/technology/this...-forces-video/
-
11 April 2017, 15:46 #2
-
11 April 2017, 15:50 #3
-
11 April 2017, 17:55 #4
Wow! Wish I could get my hands on one of those!
NRA Life Member
Basket full of Deplorables Life Member
-
11 April 2017, 18:28 #5
-
11 April 2017, 18:31 #6
That second video there is really impressive.
-
11 April 2017, 20:46 #7
I want it in quad tube, wide aspect. Boy is Santa going to be pissed this year!!!
There's no "Team" in F**K YOU!
-
12 April 2017, 05:28 #8
With GPNVG-18s costing between $30K-40K, that's a very good price. I wouldn't be surprised if this has some optical limitations. It would be interesting to know if you can adjust this on the fly in the field or if it has to be set up on test box first, like the -18s.
I'm also not real clear on how it handles heat. It apparently picks up near-IR (given the strobes), so what does it look like when looking at exhaust or incompatible lighting (which was noticeably missing in the video)? I'm guessing the image would deteriorate a bit. But probably no more than OMNI VIs or better.
-
12 April 2017, 05:56 #9
We buy two 750ml bottles of super fine bourbon, tell Gatordev it's his birthday, get him drunk, then steal his
30-40K? Problem solved!.
FTNRA Life Member
Basket full of Deplorables Life Member
-
12 April 2017, 06:55 #10
-
12 April 2017, 07:01 #11
I am guessing about that price based on my friend Google's speculative friends that were posting
BTW which video did you watch? The first was kind of simple. The second one did a lot more comparison. In that second one they did daytime and night time and even pointed the thing directly into the sun. Skip to 7:07 in the second video.
-
12 April 2017, 17:59 #12
-
12 April 2017, 18:07 #13
But that's not showing heat, that's showing visible spectrum during the day. Apparently the thing is a dual-role DTV/LLTV/plus some other wicked cool technology. What I'm talking about is looking at something giving off lots of heat (near IR) while at night. It may handle it very well, but I didn't see that which makes me curious. For legacy NVGs, exhaust or lots of near-IR tends to degain the image (like they show with the laser demo), but I didn't see a demo of how that works with this system.
And wow, is that thing big. Hadn't seen the device the first time I clicked through the videos. Definitely not something wearable (yet). The last brief I got on color wearable tubes was something along the lines of it being a technology limitation given the size. Hopefully someday it can be overcome, if it's not already on its way.
-
12 April 2017, 21:40 #14
Yeah. I hear that a lot.
HAHAA!
That camera though would have to be mounted on something. A vehicle of some sort or to monitor the perimeter of an installation or something of that sort. Lugging that thing around would be a chore but I would betcha that would bring a lot of fun to the party in some military circles.
I don't know nothing about that kind of thing but I can speculate!