Sigma LBA-714PC, LBA-710, LBA-300, LBA-712, LBA-708 Vertical Size, Horizontal Start, Horizontal Size

Models: LBA-500PC LBA-708 LBA-710 LBA-700 LBA-712 LBA-714PC LBA-400 LBA-300

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by 256 rows of video and then 20 rows of black, try a first value of 18 (24-6) for Vertical Start. If your camera is interlaced, and each frame outputs a total of 525 rows (i.e. 262.5 rows per field), and the first 32 rows of each frame are black, followed by 490 rows of video per frame, try a first value of 20 (32-12) for Vertical Start.

7.3.4Vertical Size

This value must always be an even number: Enter the number of rows that contain video data. In the above Vertical Start examples set this value to 256 in the first example, and 490 for the second example. Before the release of software version 4.xx, this value was limited to a maximum of 1000 rows. After version 4.xx this value maximum is 2000 rows. It is a good idea to start with a value 50 to 80% less than the maximum for your camera and then work up to a number that the frame grabber can actually support. This is particularly important for mega-pixel style cameras.

7.3.5Horizontal Start

This value must be an even number. Enter the pixel clock where the video data begins. A good starting value is approximately half the number of clocks from the end of HSYNC. For example: Suppose the first active pixel is 25 PCLK’s after the end of HSYNC. Enter a first value of 12 for Horizontal Start.

7.3.6Horizontal Size

This value must be an even number. Enter the number of active pixels in each horizontal row. Before the release of LBA software version 4.xx, this value was limited to a maximum of 1000 pixels. After version 4.xx this value maximum is 2000 pixels. It is a good idea to start with a value 50 to 80% less than the maximum for your camera and then work up to a number that the frame grabber can actually support. This is particularly important for mega- pixel style cameras with high-speed pixel clocks. Pixel clock frequencies below 15MHz will allow large mega-pixel cameras to interface with the largest image sizes. Cameras with high clock frequencies will require a reduction of the image size that can be acquired. We have successfully interfaced cameras with clock rates at 25MHz, but with a loss in image width. This will vary from camera to camera depending upon how the image is formatted.

After making the above settings click Start! and see if you are able to acquire some data frames. At this point, it is best to operate in Continuous capture and CW trigger mode. Also make sure that your Zoom setting is indicating X1 resolution and the Lens check box is not checked. If the above guesses were close, you should be acquiring data frames. If not, then further reduce the Vertical Start and Horizontal Start values until data frames are collected.

With your camera detector illuminated you should see the boundary of two sides of your camera’s detector, that is unless one or both of the above guesses turn out to be exactly correct. The next step is to adjust the Vertical Start and Horizontal Start values such that the camera image is set to just fill the acquired data window. Note: It is not a necessity that you configure the capture width and height to acquire all the data output by your camera. If you only want to input a portion of the detector you can reduce the Vertical Size and Horizontal Size to smaller values.

Operator’s Manual

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LBA-PC

Doc. No. 10654-001, Rev 4.10

 

 

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Sigma LBA-714PC, LBA-710, LBA-300, LBA-712, LBA-708, LBA-500PC, LBA-700 manual Vertical Size, Horizontal Start, Horizontal Size