Hmmm, do you think it can handle 9 to 12 volts without a voltage regulator inside ??
Hmmm, do you think it can handle 9 to 12 volts without a voltage regulator inside ??
No, but it draws very little current.
-- You can't have a sense of humor, if you have no sense.
George, I'm working on a IR Femtosecond laser system. A ccd from supercircuits, and a 23$ USB NTSC frame grabber gives me nice realtime video on either a laptop or the system control PC.
This gets you around the dying suppy of small NTSC monitors, plus I can grab stills or video. 6 mm focal length lens seems about right for short range applications.
Steve
=92t
We
car rear view cameras several here:
plenty of cheap displays too:
-systems-718
-Lasse
-Lasse
Thanks Steve, I'll look into USB NTSC frame grabbers. It would be nice to sometimes get video onto a computer*. But I hate the idea of time lag in a web cam. We've got a few of the LCD 'back up' displays on order. And several leads on the CCDs. (Weldex in addition to super circuits.)
George H.
e D
=92t
e=A0We
o-systems-718
Thanks Lasse, I've got some of thos on order from China.
George H.
OK Robert, my first video=92s on youtube. But first here=92s a =91scope shot of a photodiode monitoring the output. Each of the little bumps is a different transverse mode.
And now some video=92s. Smoke =91em if you=92ve got =91em, this will be a short =91trip=92.
I hope that works
George H.
Please post that for us aged hippies..
aummmmmm...
Like it!
Have you considered the NTSC LCD displays used as a second monitor for portable DVD players? The one I have is 7" diagonal & runs on 12 VDC. Some sets of DVD player & monitor allow you to use both units for displays for video games.
-- You can't have a sense of humor, if you have no sense.
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