Anybody using a thermal imaging camera?

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Looking for possible choices for automotive use. Used is ok and preferably under $500. And probably not the type that plugs into a phone. Been chasing a random battery drain, so a thermal view of the fuse boxes and modules might be helpful.
 
I dont think
usually they are more pixelated than our avatars by a factor of 10 cheap ones are only about 5000 pixel resolution sounds like a big number until you realize a 1080p computer screen has around 2 million pixels Many phones even more.
 
Look at Flir.com for ideas on what is available. You can do something close w/ infra red thermometer by measuring temps at various times.

The infra red camera might be a better choice.
 
I have a Seek Compact Pro (It is iPhone/Lightning connector though, sorry). Great tool to have.

Breaker panel showing circuits drawing the most.
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GFCI Outlet making heat
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Kat’s adhesive type oil pan heater.
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Heated blanket and cat.
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In some cameras you can adjust the contrast, I have one that takes pictures just like this!!!

It is a phone attachment do.
 

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Look at You Tube video for doing a voltage drop test on fuses. No need to pull the fuses out!
Except with multiple CAN networks that send signals all over, that can be just as bad as pulling fuses. Already tried that and gave up after checking the first 10 fuses and finding 8 of them flowing current.
 
Yes, it shows the pipes getting hot when running the hot water. If you have a boiler system, you can find all kinds of problems!
 
Except with multiple CAN networks that send signals all over, that can be just as bad as pulling fuses. Already tried that and gave up after checking the first 10 fuses and finding 8 of them flowing current.
If the car has these many Can networks you going to need a good wiring diagram and a scope to find the culprit. Check this video!

 
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We had one at work 15 years ago, a FLIR bare-bones, $25k bought for a project. It could readily see heat footprints on linoleum after someone walked by.
 
If the car has these many Can networks you going to need a good wiring diagram and a scope to find the culprit. Check this video!


I saw that video when it came out. If he had scanned the interior with a thermal camera, he may have found the bad module on the roof pretty quickly.
 
I have a little Milwaukee unit, works well enough for my needs… like when I cooked my wheels due to dragging calipers…
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Check your local library. Ours here have "homeowner kits" or something similar for a name. But they include a lot of how-to videos and a thermal camera to find drafty spots in your home.
 
I have a Fluke infrared, and there is no way to pick up a milliamp draw with the next to nothing heat it would produce. A clamp-on DC amp meter would be much better, or even a test light.
 
I have a Fluke infrared, and there is no way to pick up a milliamp draw with the next to nothing heat it would produce. A clamp-on DC amp meter would be much better, or even a test light.
The milliwatts of heat might register on a good IR camera, but if that heat source is not direcyly visible to the camera, but instead hidden behind stuff, that will make it a much harder heat source to detect, because much less IR will be radiating past what it is hidden by.
 
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