A Videocamera is Built Into The Traditional Microscope Chassis
Boreal rugged, die-cast metal body microscopes have a high resolution camera housed in the head and one power supply runs both the microscope and the camera. The included user-friendly Motic image editing software lets you capture images in JPG, TIFF, MIG and BMP formats, and movies in AVI format. You can also program regular interval times to capture images, perform photo editing, record a video, measure objects, label structures, compare side-by-side or superimposed images, amalgamate images, and record audio. Digital microscopes can connect to a computer via a USB port, while Digital/Analog microscopes can connect to both a computer via a USB port and a TV for simultaneous classroom viewing and image capture. Each microscope comes with all connecting cables. 100–120 VAC with a 5′ 6″ three-wire cord.
• Camera: 1/2″ CMOS; 1.3 million pixels (1280 x 1024); 30 frames/sec • Full size: 14″H with 7″L x 5 1/2″W base • Inclined monocular head • 10X widefield eyepiece • Revolving quad nosepiece with 4X, 10X, 40XR, and 100XR achromatic objectives • Built-in mechanical stage, 5 1/2″ x 5 1/4″ • Separate coarse and fine focus controls with slip clutch • 1.25 N.A. Abbe condenser with iris diaphragm • Built-in 15 W halogen illumination with variable intensity control
System Requirements: Mac: OSX, including Leopard, USB 2.0 Windows: Windows 2000, XP, and Vista, USB 2.0
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