This ensures that every camera "fires" at the exact same microsecond. Without this, fast-moving objects would appear blurred or disjointed when switching between views.
If you are tracking a projectile moving at 500 meters per second, even a 1-millisecond delay between two cameras results in a massive spatial error in your 3D reconstruction. Multicameraframe mode uses hardware triggers (PTP/IEEE 1588) to ensure that motion is frozen at the same point in time across all sensors. 2. Streamlining Data Throughput multicameraframe mode motion
Humans have two eyes for a reason. Our brains calculate the slight difference between what the left eye sees and what the right eye sees to judge distance. Multi-camera systems mimic this "stereo vision." This ensures that every camera "fires" at the
Let’s dive into what this technology is, how it works, and why it matters. Our brains calculate the slight difference between what
Genlocking (Generator Locking) forces each camera’s timing circuit to align with a master clock. In multicameraframe mode motion, the tolerance is sub-microsecond. This ensures that even at 240fps, every pixel from every sensor corresponds to the exact same moment in time.