SBIG All Sky 340C Color Camera

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SBIG All Sky 340C Color Camera

AllSky-340C
Enquiry Item
All SKy mono and color cameras with a 360 degree field of view in weatherproof domed enclosure

Enquire for more information or email us specifics at sales@astro.com.sg.

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SBIG All Sky 340C Color Camera

 

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The Allsky-340 is a monochrome camera and the model 340C uses a color CCD.  These are SBIG’s third generation, weatherproof, AllSky cameras for monitoring weather conditions.  With each version we gain some knowledge and this is our best one yet.  The sensor is the Kodak KAI-340 CCD, with 640 x 480 pixels, 7.4 microns square, and a high gain output stage for excellent sensitivity.  The camera electronics and CCD are from the SG-4 Smart Guider camera, our autonomous (stand-alone) guide camera.  The All Sky camera incorporates the Smart Guider Camera inside an aluminum enclosure with an acrylic dome to protect the fisheye lens.  The fisheye lens is Fujinon\'s FE185C046HA-1, with a 1.4 mm focal length, F/1.4.  We have tested this lens and the image quality is excellent wide open, all the way to the horizon.  The sample image at lest shows an All Sky camera image with the Fujinon lens and KAI-340 CCD.  The exposure was 60 seconds from a light polluted backyard – the first quarter moon had just set behind the roof.

 

 

 

One of the challenges of an All Sky camera is that the moon is in the field of view literally half of the time, averaged over a month.  The reflections from within the dome and lens can interfere with detection of stars.  The test Image 2 below is taken earlier in the night, with the dome in place, that has been DDP scaled to show the stars and the sky close to the moon.  Some ghost reflections are visible, but the image quality is excellent.

 

 

The new All Sky camera has some very interesting features that make it much more versatile than our previous offerings.  First of all, it has an RS-232 link to the PC for control and image download.  While this interface is very slow in comparison to USB, it will tolerate 100 foot (30 meter) cable runs.  Or, you can throw away the cable and use a bluetooth wireless link with an optional inexpensive adapter.  And, the unit is low power and can be powered by a solar array (also optional) so you don’t any wires AT ALL running from your PC to the camera!  The beauty of this is now the unit can be located where it has a good view of the sky, instead of good access to a power plug or PC.  Your roof is now the preferred location, above the trees and neighbor’s houses.

 

By actual test, an RS-232 link, using a USB to RS-232 adapter running at 460.8 Kbaud, with a 100 foot cable, downloads a full image reliably in 15 seconds.  At 115.2 Kbaud a full image takes 60 seconds.  Bluetooth wireless adapters will typically run at 115 K-baud, and the one we have tried here worked reliably at a distance of 75 feet.  With wireless links, one must minimize the number of walls you have to pass through.  Each wall (2 layers of dry wall or wood) costs about a factor of two signal and range.

 

These may seem rather long download times compared to the USB 2.0 interface of our last AllSky camera, but the new AllSky-340 can take an image while transmitting, so with exposures longer than the download time the camera is only insensitive for the length of the readout of the CCD, which takes place in less than 1 second to an internal memory buffer in the camera.  As a result, the camera is excellent for meteor detection.  Its field of view is wider than our previous meteor camera, so it should see many more meteors near the horizon.  One other plus – the software can run continuously in the background while you use your computer for other tasks.  At these slow download rates the computer workload is so slight your applications won’t even notice.  It will not interfere with regular imaging using the same PC.  The All Sky image is there when you want to view it.

 

The housing is illustrated in Image 3.  The fisheye lens is mounted to a plate which can be translated, tipped, and focused relative to the CCD, so the full resolution of the lens can be achieved.  This plate is also heated, to keep the lens free of condensation.  The heat rises into the acrylic dome, warming it and keeping off the dew, and drying off raindrops.  The inexpensive acrylic dome is easily replaced by removing a few screws, allowing for routine replacement in the field as the dome suffers the inevitable scratches and damage due to sunlight, windblown dust and disrespectful birds.  SBIG will maintain a supply of replacement domes.  The prototype shown here is black – the production version will have a white body so it doesn’t get too hot in the sun.  It is 5.5x5.5x11 inches in size (14x14x28 cm).

 

 

 We also offer a color version of this product using a KAI-340 CCD with a color matrix.  This can produce dramatic images, as shown in Image 4.  This camera can also take exposures as short as 50 microseconds, so daylight operation is possible, allowing recording of cloud conditions 24 hours a day.  A blooming streak will be noted vertically through the sun, but otherwise the image is excellent. 

 

 

Specifications

 

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