User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- 1 Disclaimers
- 2 Safety information
- 3 Notice to user
- 4 Customer help
- 5 Quick Start Guide
- 6 Description
- 7 Operation
- 7.1 Charging the battery
- 7.2 Turning on and turning off the camera
- 7.3 Saving an image
- 7.4 Recalling an image
- 7.5 Deleting an image
- 7.6 Deleting all images
- 7.7 Measuring a temperature using a spotmeter
- 7.8 Hiding measurement tools
- 7.9 Changing the color palette
- 7.10 Changing the image mode
- 7.11 Changing the temperature scale mode
- 7.12 Setting the emissivity
- 7.13 Changing the reflected apparent temperature
- 7.14 Changing the distance
- 7.15 Performing a non-uniformity correction
- 7.16 Using the camera lamp
- 7.17 Configuring Wi-Fi
- 7.18 Changing the settings
- 7.19 Updating the camera
- 8 Technical data
- 9 Mechanical drawings
- 10 CE Declaration of conformity
- 11 Cleaning the camera
- 12 Application examples
- 13 About FLIR Systems
- 14 Definitions and laws
- 15 Thermographic measurement techniques
- 16 History of infrared technology
- 17 Theory of thermography
- 18 The measurement formula
- 19 Emissivity tables
About FLIR Systems
13
FLIR Systems was established in 1978 to pioneer the development of high-performance
infrared imaging systems, and is the world leader in the design, manufacture, and mar-
keting of thermal imaging systems for a wide variety of commercial, industrial, and gov-
ernment applications. Today, FLIR Systems embraces five major companies with
outstanding achievements in infrared technology since 1958—the Swedish AGEMA In-
frared Systems (formerly AGA Infrared Systems), the three United States companies In-
digo Systems, FSI, and Inframetrics, and the French company Cedip.
Since 2007, FLIR Systems has acquired several companies with world-leading expertise
in sensor technologies:
• Extech Instruments (2007)
• Ifara Tecnologías (2008)
• Salvador Imaging (2009)
• OmniTech Partners (2009)
• Directed Perception (2009)
• Raymarine (2010)
• ICx Technologies (2010)
• TackTick Marine Digital Instruments (2011)
• Aerius Photonics (2011)
• Lorex Technology (2012)
• Traficon (2012)
• MARSS (2013)
• DigitalOptics micro-optics business (2013)
• DVTEL (2015)
• Point Grey Research (2016)
• Prox Dynamics (2016)
Figure 13.1 Patent documents from the early 1960s
FLIR Systems has three manufacturing plants in the United States (Portland, OR, Bos-
ton, MA, Santa Barbara, CA) and one in Sweden (Stockholm). Since 2007 there is also a
manufacturing plant in Tallinn, Estonia. Direct sales offices in Belgium, Brazil, China,
France, Germany, Great Britain, Hong Kong, Italy, Japan, Korea, Sweden, and the USA
—together with a worldwide network of agents and distributors—support our internation-
al customer base.
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