I’m not sure if it’s normal for all thermal devices, for the breach or if there is something wrong. I can’t really find any discussions on this matter. Any info appreciated. I’ve tried playing w the settings but seem to always see it.
The pic I added was taken with my phone, so that’s what I’m actually seeing. Even though taking a pic of a screen can be a degraded look. That is actually pretty accurate to what I’m seeing
I get the same on my FLIR PTS536 with internal image capture, though it's less pronounced. I don't see it when I'm using the device. I think it may be down to how FLIR captures internal images. Are you seeing this during actual use? Or is the image above a photo you took with a phone/camera through the eyepiece? Doing that will greatly exaggerate the pixellation.
It’s brand new. Only had it for a couple of weeks. I do hear the NUC every so often. And doing the manual NUC doesn’t change a thing. It is like I’m looking through a window screen with all the tiny squares.viewing the image horizontally from left to right, the 2 dark vertical lines at approximate 1/3 & 2/3 aren't seen in the half dozen Breach optics I've had in my hands. Your phone may be magnifying noise in the image or it may be a display fault.
Do they go away with a NUC?
Is the device new or second hand?
Thank you for the info. That article was over my head…. But yes, looks similar.Calibrating to Reduce Horizontal Line Artifact
This application note describes a known artifact of the Sony IMX036 sensor and provides steps that can be taken to reduce the effect.www.flir.com
I found this on flir website. Seems like a similar issue despite different device/sensor.
I could be wrong about the following but cheaper thermal sensors take some time to adjust to ambient temperature. If you leave breach inside 72° house then go outside and it's substantially warmer or cooler then you are going to need to let your breach's thermal sensor reach ambient temp for optimal image quality.
The other thing is NUCing. You need to NUC more often during this warm up period to keep a decent image. Once sensor has reached ambient temp you will need to NUC less often.
I pretty much NUC all the fucking time when I'm scanning regardless.