The problem with anything built for military/medical/emergency service use, is that by the time you have ruggedized it, packaged it, setup service and support and got it approved by a dozen different agencies - well even a simple flashlight really does end up costing $100
From what it sounds like, using my arm as a sensor would have a similar resolution thermal imaging, with perhaps a faster scan rate.
I was intrigued that this came from an actual business and not a DIY hobbist, so looked into Tanagram and couldn't figure them out. A strange company... seems more design than actual engineering.
Isn't the better way to make something cheaper by inventing new components and then mass producing, vs. taking a stock, cheap, 8x1 thermopile array?
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[ 3.1 ms ] story [ 26.5 ms ] threadThe problem with anything built for military/medical/emergency service use, is that by the time you have ruggedized it, packaged it, setup service and support and got it approved by a dozen different agencies - well even a simple flashlight really does end up costing $100
Not at the army surplus store.
I was intrigued that this came from an actual business and not a DIY hobbist, so looked into Tanagram and couldn't figure them out. A strange company... seems more design than actual engineering.
Isn't the better way to make something cheaper by inventing new components and then mass producing, vs. taking a stock, cheap, 8x1 thermopile array?