|
Cruise with Thermal Imaging
Would you spend more time on the water if darkness and poor visibility didn’t matter? The Voyager multi-sensor thermal imager
lets you see floating debris, outcroppings of land, channel markers, and other boats in total darkness and bad weather, allowing
you to navigate with confidence day and night. Don’t be afraid of the dark – cruise with Voyager.
• On-screen graphics give precise feedback of where the camera is pointing, so you always know where you are looking.
• Gyro-stabilization automatically corrects the camera’s pointing angles to compensate for vessel movement and rough seas.
• Exclusive ‘Home’ position returns the camera to your pre-selected pointing angles at the touch of a button.
• Quick-install Joystick Control Unit (JCU).
• Automatic window defrosting for clear imaging in harsh conditions.
High Performance Thermal & Visible Imaging System
The FLIR Voyager, a high performance thermal and visible imaging system for maritime Navigation, Security, and Search & Rescue.The Voyager is powerful multi sensor thermal imaging system for maritime navigation and security. It employs Foveus, a powerful image presentation concept found in human vision.
Foveus Concept
The Foveus concept provides high resolution at the center of the scene, without sacrificing a wide field of view, which is critical to security applications for situational awareness.
Capabilities
Voyager delivers fast threat detection, zooming between lens settings in both thermal and visible imagers, and an array of networking capabilities. Night vision could never compare to true thermal cameras.
Dual Thermal Imagers with Foveus:
See in total darkness, through light fog and smoke with continuous wide and narrow zoom
Long Range Daylight TV:
Allows you to read registrations and identify colors when conditions permit
Advanced Stabilization:
Delivers stable imagery regardless of sea-state
Multiple Control Options:
Use Voyager as a navigational aid or for threat detection above or below deck. Voyager provides continuous zooming between the wide and narrow field of view thermal imagers. |