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Sony XCG-CP510 polarised machine vision camera and SDK available in mass-production quantities
SDK simplifies application development and speeds time to market for developers when using 5.1 MP, 4-way polarised light module
Simplifies stress inspection, contrast improvement, glare removal, scratch detection, object detection/ removal/ enhancement
Sony Europe’s Image Sensing Solutions' XCG-CP510, the first in a new category of polarised machine vision cameras, is now available in mass-production quantities.
The module is the industry’s first polarised camera to feature an SDK, which includes a range of reference applications. This will significantly cut development time and cost for system integrators creating applications using polarised modules.
The XCG-CP510, and the new category, is based on Sony’s newly developed IMX250MZR global shutter CMOS sensor, which uses monochrome quad polarised filters to capture polarised light in four planes.
To extract the best-possible image from the Sony sensor, the design of the XCG-CP510 module has been optimised by Sony’s industrial camera engineers and outputs 5.1 MP polarised B/W images at 23 fps, transmitted over a GigE interface.
Usage scenarios that would benefit the new camera category include stress inspection, contrast improvement, scratch detection and object detection /removal / enhancement from a single image capture. Sony is targeting a wide range of manufacturing applications - from glass inspection to electronics - as well as the ITS and security sectors.
Arnaud Destruels, Marketing Manager, Sony ISS commented “This continues Sony’s history of innovation and precision, with the sensor and camera engineers working closely to enable the best possible image to be created, while building in several beneficial features within a small footprint.”
The small footprint of this cubic camera also includes multiple trigger modes: edge detection, pulse width detection, bulk trigger, sequential trigger, free set sequence and a burst-trigger function. Additionally, the module can be fired via hardware or software triggers or via the IEEE1588 precision timing protocol, with the unit capable of acting as either a slave or dynamically assigned master device.
The IMX250MZR, Sony’s newest image sensor, is a 2/3-type PregiusⓇ GS CMOS sensor and uses four different angled polarisers, with each pixel polarised for either 90o, 45o, 135o or 0o. A four-pixel (2 x 2) calculation unit is then created to capture light in four planes.
The camera also achieves a greater sensitivity with improved extinction ratio through Sony’s Wire Grid Polariser technology, which places the on-chip polariser beneath an on-chip lens.