
The HQ camera features a 12MP sensor and can connect C- and CS-mount interchangeable lenses and, with a lens mount adapter, even DSLR lenses can be used. It uses a small pinpoint lens but can actually record very sharp images, such as have been used to track small barcodes on moving birds and fish. The v2 camera has an 8MP sensor and is also available as an infrared model (Pi Noir) that can capture near-IR wavelengths up to 1000nm. However, as it is the GPU hardware not the camera that sets the video recording limits, the video recording capabilities of all cameras (at 5MB and above) are actually the same, with and Camera Module Note that cameras may differ in their max resolution, which means that larger images may be recorded, such as at a resolution of (4056 x 3040 pixels) with the HQ camera module and (3280 x 2464 pixels) with the v2 module.

A variety of modules exist, including two official models offered by the Raspberry Pi Foundation, the v2 and the HQ camera board. With the Raspberry Pi, it is possible to record with a wide range of cameras, primarily using the Camera Serial Interface to connect to dedicated camera modules to the board via a ribbon cable.

The Raspberry Pi is a great tool for controlled and automated image and video recording. 'What to buy' and 'Should I buy.' questions go in the the sticked megathread dedicated to these types of questions in order to keep the feed from being spammed with them.Image and video recording with the Raspberry PI 'What to buy' and 'Should I buy.' questions go in the sticked megathread. These are automatically removed and using one could result in a permaban based on your previous post and comment history. An example of an Amazon affiliate link is amzn.to. No Amazon affiliate links and also no referral links that 'refer' you to Amazon affiliate links. No Amazon affiliate and/or referral links. A list of company subreddit's can be found in the sidebar. If that company does not have a subreddit you can post in a subreddit such as r/HomeAutomation, r/SmartHome, etc.

HomeBridge questions should go in r/HomeBridge, questions that are not related to HomeKit but are about a company's product that supports HomeKit should still go in that company's subreddit. Only posts related to HomeKit are permitted. Rudeness will get you banned (7 days on average) when repeated, and incivility will also get you banned when repeated. This means you've chosen to break the rules. As Reddiquette says, "Remember the human," and "Don't be rude at all." Harassment could get you banned from r/HomeKit the first time depending on the severity, (Don't try to test the mods) or the second time, almost always no matter what. Keep it civil and safe for work.īe nice and civil. Hi, welcome to r/Homekit! Please remember to read the rules.
