Please use the camera windows tool to view available windows for your selected camera model. The standard camera window has been selected due to its suitability for most applications. However, other options are readily available without requiring a Customer Special Request (CSR). This interactive tool allows you to view and select the correct optional camera window and associated part code for your camera type. Refer to the Technical Note How to Select a Window for your Camera for further technical information.

To use this tool first, select the Family from the dropdown, then the Model and finally select from the different window options. Once selected the quantum efficiency data and windows transmission data will be shown in the graphs below. For each camera model the standard window does not require a separate order code, however, for optional windows, the tool will generate the order code required. 



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I have a bunch of V2 and V3 cameras that shoot though double pane windows and found that I could not shoot though portions of the windows that have screens on the outside. The screen shows up WAY too much.

If anyone here is still interested in different ways to window mount cams, I would suggest doing a forum search for posts by @victormaletic. Victor is the reigning Subject Matter Expert when it comes to tips, tricks, design, fabrication, and How-to posts on mounting cams to windows.

Feedback/Bug Description:

When in external camera view in VR, the tool bar and any open tool bar windows are not shown. Or, more precisely, they are still shown but are scaled down to the size of the cockpit. See the inline photos:

BUT, WHEN YOU SWITCH TO EXTERNAL CAM, the toolbar is not accessible (which could be a problem if you used the toolbar to switch to external cam), but any open toolbar windows show up (tiny) even through the skin of the plane, as shown here:

(1) I used a Kodak Wratten gelatin filter No. 25 (red) when replacing the red windows in an Ensign 6x9cm camera. The No. 25 looked an exact match for the originals and worked beautifully. Kodak's catalog number is 149 5605.

(2) When using folders with red windows, mostly I load low-ISO film, mainly black-and-white, typically Ilford Pan F (ISO 50). In bright sun, I keep the back of the camera towards my body and shade the red windows when advancing film.

I've got a newer contraption Chinese Seagull folder that has the windows, and I've never had any problem with it leaking light. But then I always make sure to shade the camera back as I check the advance, and leave it open as short a time as possible.

I have not had the time to run a roll of film throught it. Also, as mentioned earlier, I tried film backing paper with the flashlight, and nothing came out, the paper is OPAQUE ! From this I conclude that the film windows are not the cause. The film test will tell, hopefully that my assessment of the leak was correct, hopefully.

It looks like you're using the Field of View to represent the vertical field of view. As you can see, the vertical fields are the same. You see the same amount of ceiling and floor in both windows. But because the windows are different aspect ratios, that necessarily means that there will be a different field of view horizontally.

And another test that works, building the same code in Ubuntu running under virtual box hosted by the same windows 10 that the mingw gcc build doesn't work for. It's only the windows mingw build that doesn't work.

I think I'm talking to myself here, but here goes anyway. I changed from the Cygwin installation of gcc to msys2, and the test code works, I can see my ugly fizog on the screen. So then I tried to build my real code rather than the test code, and I get unresolved symbol for cv::resize. I've looked in the library, it's there, but nothing I can do can persuade the link to work with the msys2 release of the library. I'm on the verge of giving up on supporting gcc on windows for the project, it will have to be just gcc on linux and VC++ on windows.

SOREM, a branch of Wintech Groupe, was the first company in the world to offer a solution of highly resistant monoblock aeronautical optical windows for the protection of on-board cameras on civilian and military aircraft (a camera window) .

The monoblock design (with just one layer) compared to multi-layered glass optical windows, guarantees an optimal, non-altered and non-degraded image. The monoblock window is also much more resistant and shows very good results in terms of defrosting and resistance to mechanical shocks and erosion.

Currently i facing and issue after client workstation upgrade to windows 10. the camera pop up not unable to view at mapping inside monitoring station.i already install AxisCameraControl application and run CMD for regsvr32 axiscameracontrol ocx. but show an error failed to load.

I'd occasionally have Notepad windows or w/e fly off the edge with no way to retrieve them. It's just lost out there in the void. And that kinda sucks! Thankfully, with some 1337 haxxor skillz, you can fix this.

Again, the window should snap to your cursor. For some MDI (mutli-document interface; think old Photoshop before they introduced tabs) applications, you might need to use Ctrl+Space instead. You can also use Ctrl+Tab to switch sub-windows, usually. (Try it in your web browser!)

oh wow, this kind of thing happened to me a lot with old games crashing, from the beginning of the dos/windows split. i want to say back then i used some obscure keystroke for tiling windows that doesnt exist anymore, after selecting it through alt tab, to SOMETIMES recover the launcher or whatever it was that went for a run. memory is a little hazy, though 17dc91bb1f

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