User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- Table of contents
- 1 Warnings & Cautions
- 2 Notice to user
- 3 Customer help
- 4 Documentation updates
- 5 Important note about this manual
- 6 Parts lists
- 7 Quick Start Guide
- 8 Camera parts
- 9 Screen elements
- 10 Navigating the menu system
- 11 Connecting external devices and storage media
- 12 Pairing Bluetooth devices
- 13 Configuring Wi-Fi
- 14 Handling the camera
- 15 Working with images
- 16 Working with thermal fusion and picture-in-picture image modes
- 17 Working with measurement tools
- 18 Fetching data from external Extech meters
- 19 Working with isotherms
- 20 Annotating images
- 21 Recording video clips
- 22 Changing settings
- 23 Cleaning the camera
- 24 Technical data
- 25 Dimensional drawings
- 25.1 Camera dimensions, front view (1)
- 25.2 Camera dimensions, front view (2)
- 25.3 Camera dimensions, side view (1)
- 25.4 Camera dimensions, side view (2)
- 25.5 Camera dimensions, side view (3)
- 25.6 Infrared lens (30 mm/15°)
- 25.7 Infrared lens (10 mm/45°)
- 25.8 Battery (1)
- 25.9 Battery (2)
- 25.10 Battery (3)
- 25.11 Battery charger (1)
- 25.12 Battery charger (2)
- 25.13 Battery charger (3)
- 25.14 Battery charger (4)
- 26 Application examples
- 27 Introduction to building thermography
- 27.1 Disclaimer
- 27.2 Important note
- 27.3 Typical field investigations
- 27.3.1 Guidelines
- 27.3.2 About moisture detection
- 27.3.3 Moisture detection (1): Low-slope commercial roofs
- 27.3.4 Moisture detection (2): Commercial & residential façades
- 27.3.5 Moisture detection (3): Decks & balconies
- 27.3.6 Moisture detection (4): Plumbing breaks & leaks
- 27.3.7 Air infiltration
- 27.3.8 Insulation deficiencies
- 27.4 Theory of building science
- 27.4.1 General information
- 27.4.2 The effects of testing and checking
- 27.4.3 Sources of disruption in thermography
- 27.4.4 Surface temperature and air leaks
- 27.4.5 Measuring conditions & measuring season
- 27.4.6 Interpretation of infrared images
- 27.4.7 Humidity & dew point
- 27.4.8 Excerpt from Technical Note ‘Assessing thermal bridging and insulation continuity’ (UK example)
- 28 Introduction to thermographic inspections of electrical installations
- 28.1 Important note
- 28.2 General information
- 28.3 Measurement technique for thermographic inspection of electrical installations
- 28.4 Reporting
- 28.5 Different types of hot spots in electrical installations
- 28.6 Disturbance factors at thermographic inspection of electrical installations
- 28.7 Practical advice for the thermographer
- 29 About FLIR Systems
- 30 Glossary
- 31 Thermographic measurement techniques
- 32 History of infrared technology
- 33 Theory of thermography
- 34 The measurement formula
- 35 Emissivity tables
The improvement of infrared-detector sensitivity progressed slowly. Another major
breakthrough, made by Langley in 1880, was the invention of the bolometer. This
consisted of a thin blackened strip of platinum connected in one arm of a Wheatstone
bridge circuit upon which the infrared radiation was focused and to which a sensitive
galvanometer responded. This instrument is said to have been able to detect the heat
from a cow at a distance of 400 meters.
An English scientist, Sir James Dewar, first introduced the use of liquefied gases as
cooling agents (such as liquid nitrogen with a temperature of -196 °C (-320.8 °F)) in
low temperature research. In 1892 he invented a unique vacuum insulating container
in which it is possible to store liquefied gases for entire days. The common ‘thermos
bottle’, used for storing hot and cold drinks, is based upon his invention.
Between the years 1900 and 1920, the inventors of the world ‘discovered’ the infrared.
Many patents were issued for devices to detect personnel, artillery, aircraft, ships –
and even icebergs. The first operating systems, in the modern sense, began to be
developed during the 1914–18 war, when both sides had research programs devoted
to the military exploitation of the infrared. These programs included experimental
systems for enemy intrusion/detection, remote temperature sensing, secure commu-
nications, and ‘flying torpedo’ guidance. An infrared search system tested during this
period was able to detect an approaching airplane at a distance of 1.5 km (0.94 miles),
or a person more than 300 meters (984 ft.) away.
The most sensitive systems up to this time were all based upon variations of the
bolometer idea, but the period between the two wars saw the development of two
revolutionary new infrared detectors: the image converter and the photon detector.
At first, the image converter received the greatest attention by the military, because
it enabled an observer for the first time in history to literally ‘see in the dark’. However,
the sensitivity of the image converter was limited to the near infrared wavelengths,
and the most interesting military targets (i.e. enemy soldiers) had to be illuminated
by infrared search beams. Since this involved the risk of giving away the observer’s
position to a similarly-equipped enemy observer, it is understandable that military
interest in the image converter eventually faded.
The tactical military disadvantages of so-called 'active’ (i.e. search beam-equipped)
thermal imaging systems provided impetus following the 1939–45 war for extensive
secret military infrared-research programs into the possibilities of developing ‘passive’
(no search beam) systems around the extremely sensitive photon detector. During
this period, military secrecy regulations completely prevented disclosure of the status
of infrared-imaging technology. This secrecy only began to be lifted in the middle of
the 1950’s, and from that time adequate thermal-imaging devices finally began to be
available to civilian science and industry.
168 Publ. No. T559597 Rev. a554 – ENGLISH (EN) – September 27, 2011
32 – History of infrared technology










