Difference between revisions of "FlexFrame 3020"

From Camera-wiki.org
Jump to: navigation, search
(Links: Re-Instated Link URL, Redirected Link URL to archived version)
(photos/vagn49/50362607138/ added from pool)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{NeedPhotos}}
+
{{Flickr_image
 +
|image_source= https://www.flickr.com/photos/vagn49/50362607138/in/pool-camerawiki/
 +
|image= https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/50362607138_92ae3240a9.jpg
 +
|image_align= right
 +
|image_text= FlexFrame 3020 on a Hasselblad 555 ELD
 +
|image_by=  Vagn1949
 +
|image_rights=  non-commercial
 +
}}
 
The '''FlexFrame 3020''' was a [[digital back|digital camera back]] with 24.6x36.9mm 6 [[Megapixel]] [[CCD]] image sensor (2000×3000 [[pixel]]s). It was made in 2001 by [[Imacon]]. An electro-mechanical micro-step sensor-shift feature allowed to make multi-exposure shots with the sensor shifted in 4 different positions for 4 exposures so that the exposures could be put together as one true-24-Megapixel image. The camera module  could deliver 8 bit RGB-files or 16 bit RGB-Files. It had an SCSI/Firewire interface and was adaptable to several [[medium format]] contemporary cameras. It could make 1 image in 2 seconds and needed an internal cooler.
 
The '''FlexFrame 3020''' was a [[digital back|digital camera back]] with 24.6x36.9mm 6 [[Megapixel]] [[CCD]] image sensor (2000×3000 [[pixel]]s). It was made in 2001 by [[Imacon]]. An electro-mechanical micro-step sensor-shift feature allowed to make multi-exposure shots with the sensor shifted in 4 different positions for 4 exposures so that the exposures could be put together as one true-24-Megapixel image. The camera module  could deliver 8 bit RGB-files or 16 bit RGB-Files. It had an SCSI/Firewire interface and was adaptable to several [[medium format]] contemporary cameras. It could make 1 image in 2 seconds and needed an internal cooler.
  

Latest revision as of 06:44, 1 December 2022

The FlexFrame 3020 was a digital camera back with 24.6x36.9mm 6 Megapixel CCD image sensor (2000×3000 pixels). It was made in 2001 by Imacon. An electro-mechanical micro-step sensor-shift feature allowed to make multi-exposure shots with the sensor shifted in 4 different positions for 4 exposures so that the exposures could be put together as one true-24-Megapixel image. The camera module could deliver 8 bit RGB-files or 16 bit RGB-Files. It had an SCSI/Firewire interface and was adaptable to several medium format contemporary cameras. It could make 1 image in 2 seconds and needed an internal cooler.


Links