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tornado33
16-01-2008, 07:40 PM
Hi all
Though it was cloudy I got out the 850Nm infra red pass filter on my modded 350D F5.6, 1/90sec iso 200 hand held. Had to focus by trial and error.
I used Iris to process the image, decoding the raw image then converting the cfa back to a colour image, and made an interesting discovery. As it came up a perfect grey, that is no colour cast at all, it proves that the coloured dyes in the red green and blue pixels are all equally transparent to infra red light, so the camera effectively behaves like a monochrome sensor.

Gee IR light cuts through haze.
Scott

ballaratdragons
16-01-2008, 07:59 PM
Looks better than the infra red ones of your street that you posted last year, Scott. Sort of clearer :thumbsup:

It a wonder that the car didn't glow near the hot engine and exhaust area. :shrug:

joshman
16-01-2008, 08:17 PM
would be interesting to see a side by side with a normal pic of your street

Alchemy
16-01-2008, 08:30 PM
looks awesome,

Or is it just a heavy frost :P

tornado33
16-01-2008, 10:38 PM
Thanks. Yes its amazing how well vegetation reflects IR light. I find it generally doesnt pick up heat from cars as it has to be fairly short wavelentgh IR light to be detected, eg almost glowing, perhaps the exhaust of a car thats been on a reasonable drive might show up. I should take a normal pic from the same position as a comparison.
Scott

jjjnettie
17-01-2008, 09:40 AM
I agree Alchemy, it looks like a very chilly winters morning.
Interesting pic Scott.

h0ughy
17-01-2008, 12:34 PM
need to mow the lawn scott too much white...LOL

Ric
17-01-2008, 04:31 PM
Fascinating image Scott, like other have mentioned it looks like a freezing winters morning.

leon
17-01-2008, 08:57 PM
Now that is different Scott, I like it

Leon

tornado33
17-01-2008, 10:01 PM
Thanks
Heres the same scene, at night!
57 seconds (I just kept the shutter open for what I guess would be long enough) 50mm f1.8 @f1.8 ISO200
Totally overcast, windy and the rain had not long stopped.
Scott

gary
18-01-2008, 12:40 PM
Hi Scott,

Thanks for the images.

I use to play with Kodak IR transparency fim back in the mid-70's and when
processed it produced funky false-color results which suited that era. :)

Did part of your camera's mod include removing the internal IR blocking filter?

It's interesting that the image ended up being monochromatic rather than
the CCD pixels with the red filtering being more sensitive than the blue and
green ones.

Best regards

Gary

DeanoNZL
18-01-2008, 03:22 PM
I think the camera has to be cooled alot to see the heat signature.
When they commissioned the Police Helicopter IR camera over here quite a few years back, they found this out the hard way, especially with a Nightsun Illuminator next door.:D

kljucd1
20-01-2008, 09:53 PM
Hi,

Hmmm...that actually looks like it would be a very interesting type of photography to get into.

Good shots too.

Regards


Daniel...

tornado33
23-01-2008, 10:38 PM
Thanks all



Yes, I bought the camera through Hutech. They remove the IR blocking filter and replace it with clear antireflection coated glass of equal thickness, that way autofocus si still accurate and the chip can recieve unfiltered IR light. It can "see" a hotplate before it gets to red heat.

For normal astroimaging I use an IDAS uv/ir filter where I dont want IR light coming through
Scott