you could also diy one from a wrecked fancy car
http://diydrones.com/profiles/blogs/fli ... hexacopter
Not the same. Those don't give the close up square on image. And that makes a huge difference with these cameras. And those ain't the front wing!flynfrog wrote:You could tell your car setup is wrong IN REAL TIME.n smikle wrote:
On the FRONT WING.. being raced!
There must be an advancement in minituriasation and processing power to have this my friend. think very carefully about it.
I have used thermal imaging cameras to scan power lines and they are quite small indeed, but In Formula 1 have only seen them on the rear floor of the car in front the rear tyre..
Imagine the implications of having LIVE full thermal imaging on ALL FOUR tyres!!
Once again nothing new. Iv'e seen them mounted in side pods to watch the front tires in testing too. The fact they left them on for the race just means they are really concerned about tire temps not that its some new magical idea. If the other teams thought it would buy them anything they would run them too.
http://scarbsf1.files.wordpress.com/201 ... mirror.jpg
2011
http://img840.imageshack.us/img840/3325 ... spufff.jpg
2006
https://encrypted-tbn1.gstatic.com/imag ... mBz6kH8oUg
I have posted information about this some time ago .Belatti wrote:Does anyone know a supplier and price of one of these cameras?
OK? How much do you think is gained by mounting it to a shaky wing looking and a wheel moving in 3 axis. How much accuracy would you say is gained by mounting square on vs on a slight angle?n smikle wrote:flynfrog wrote:n smikle wrote:
snip....
Not the same. Those don't give the close up square on image. And that makes a huge difference with these cameras. And those ain't the front wing!
The temperature distribution in the tangential direction wont change that much as the tyre rotates through an angle equal to range of the cameras vision. It will always be an image of vertical bands no matter how much the wings oscillate up and down due to the high angular velocity of the tyre anyway.flynfrog wrote:OK? How much do you think is gained by mounting it to a shaky wing looking and a wheel moving in 3 axis. How much accuracy would you say is gained by mounting square on vs on a slight angle?n smikle wrote:flynfrog wrote:
I have no idea if the 12K EUR is the lowest price. Just searched for a price,as I was curious how much it is. I read somewhere, someone purchased it for 10 000 USD, but I guess it would be more after taxes in Europe.marcush. wrote:I have considered the Flir product but the pricing was just outrageous ...but less than those 12k if iยดm correct...
Plus, I guess the 'no extra cost' may be included in the pricehttp://www.dronefilmer.com/index.php?option=com_opencart&Itemid=55&route=product/product&product_id=172 wrote:Tau 640 Export Info
General: All paperwork and licenses are taken care of by Dronefilmer on behalf of our clients at no extra cost.
most teams use the cameras for testing and practice.WhiteBlue wrote:I think the cameras will help tremendously when you are having to optimize the setup very quickly in different ambient temperature ranges. You can see if the heat dissipation is localized for instance to the shoulders and not across the wholer contact patch. In such a case a single read out may be misleading. And because they have the recordings the cameras may be very useful even when you do not use them for real time decision making. You can look at the recordings and find out which decisions on setup failed or succeeded for whatever reasons. I was mightily impressed by how much Merc was able to improve Hamilton's setup from FP3 to qualifying. It was a difference of night and day. Easily 0.8 seconds in it. I was wondering if the cameras had something to do with that.