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Neon-CLB is the world's first PoCL frame grabber. Now comes the Neon-CLD which supports two cameras on the same low-cost x4 PCIe platform. Both cameras can be run completely independent (with different resolutions, frame rates, triggering modes, etc.) or perfectly synchronized. The Neon-CLD is incredibly flexible and powerful, yet it can substantially lower system cost. Not only is the Neon-CLD very aggressively priced, but there are additional savings from connecting two cameras to one frame grabber.
Adding the Neon-CLD to application is
simple with SDK, which supports both 32-bit and 64-bit operating systems.
Develop application using sophisticated buffer management APIs, or download our
free drivers, available for most 3rd party machine vision packages.
Power over Camera Link
Power over Camera Link (PoCL) is an extension of the Camera Link specification that allows for frame grabbers to provide power to small cameras over the Camera Link cable. PoCL provides many advantages to the OEM. First, the cabling is vastly simplified, as only a single cable is required for data, power, and control to the camera. This provides all the convenience of Firewire or USB cables schemes with the addition of industrial cabling and much higher data rates. Another advantage is that, because only a single cable is required, the camera footprint can be greatly reduced.
PoCL Safe Power
The baseline PoCL specification only outlines the basic requirement of the frame grabber providing power to the camera. However, without some protection, there are many situations that can occur where both the frame grabber and/or the PC the board it is installed in can be damaged. To overcome these problems an ancillary provision was added to the PoCL standard called "Safe Power". The Safe Power specification takes into account every possible situation that might occur on the CL power lines and protects both the frame grabber and the PC. Safe Power also provides a path for backwards compatiblity with non-PoCL cameras and non-PoCL cables.
FlowThru Architecture
Comprised of a user-programmable Video Pipeline, a flexible Camera Control Unit, efficient high-speed video FIFOs and a highly-optimized scatter/gather DMA engine, the FlowThru architecture allows the Karbon-CL to control, acquire, reformat, and transfer video data directly into the user's application at camera speeds with zero latency or CPU usage. FlowThru architecture has been continuously optimized and enhanced to support a wide variety of imaging applications such as document/package processing, semiconductor, continuous web inspection, sequence capture, and motion analysis. It can easily be adapted to the specific needs of application.
Software Support
The Neon-CLD is supported by the BitFlow Software Development Kit (SDK), which is available for both 32-bit and 64-bit Windows platforms. The SDK is board family generic and will work with all of BitFlow's frame grabbers. The kit provides drivers, DLLs, and configuration utilities for people interested in using third party software. For customers interested in developing their own applications, the SDK provides header files, libraries, and huge amounts of example code. The SDK provides a wide range of Application Programming Interfaces (API), from low-level direct hardware access to high-level automatic buffer management. Every line of code has been engineered for reliability under the toughest industrial conditions. At the same time, a priority has been put on ease of use and short development times.
PCI Express Interface
The Neon-CLD uses a x4 PCI Express bus interface. The PCI Express bus offers huge increases in DMA performance over the PCI bus. However, what is less well known is that the PCI Express bus is always peer to peer. This means the Neon-CLD does not share the bus with any other devices. In most motherboard architectures, it will talk directly to the PCI chipset that is on the memory bus. This direct connection equates to higher sustained DMA bandwidths regardless of system load. Most motherboards also support concurrent full DMA speed on all of their PCI Express slots. The board will work in any slot that it fits in. This means not only x16, x8 and x4 slots, but also, as is becoming the trend, x1 slots that use x4 (or larger) connectors.
Camera Control and I/O
Supported by a GUI camera file editing
utility (CamEd), the Neon-CLD can acquire fixed or variable size images and
features a programmable ROI (Region Of Interest) sub-windowing capability. The
board provides a full set of camera control signals (CC1, CC2, CC3, CC4) and
sync inputs (LVAL, FVAL, PCLK, trigger, and encoder) for each camera connected
to the board (up to four cameras can be connected). These signals are
completely independent, although there are provisions for driving all cameras
from a signal set up encoder/trigger signals. There is also a large number of
programmable general purpose outputs and inputs that are not tied to the
camera's timing.
Specifications
>> Supports
two Base CL cameras
>> Provides
Power over Camera Link (PoCL) for both cameras
>> Support
both PoCL and non-PoCL cameras
>> Provides
Safe Power - full protection from all CL power line faults
>> Both
cameras can be independent of synchronized
>> Separate
I/O for each camera
>> MDR
Camera Link connectors
>> The
Neon-CLD appears to Windows as two separate frame grabbers
>>Fully
backwards compatible with non-PoCL cameras and cables
>> Half-Size
x4 PCI Express Board
>> Acquire
up to 24 bits at 85 MHz
>> FlowThru
technology means that no on-board memory is needed
>> Sustained
DMA rates up to 350 MB/S for each camera (700 MB/S total)
>> Supports
images up to 256K x 128K
>> No
frame rate limit
>> Triggers
and encoders for external control of acquisition
>> Programmable
signal generator for camera control (independent for each camera)
>> Quadrature
encoder support including sophisticated triggering schemes
>>Encoder
divider/multiplier
>>Drivers,
utilities and examples for Windows and Linux
>> Supported
on both 32-bit and 64-bit platforms
>>Drivers
for most 3rd party processing environments (e.g. HALCON, LabView, VisionPro,
MATLAB, etc.)
>> Acquire
variable length frames with line scan cameras
>>Acquire
image sequences well beyond the 4GB barrier
>>RoHS
compliant