Outdoors

Night-vision binoculars bring 4K color to after-dark exploration

Night-vision binoculars bring 4K color to after-dark exploration
The Yashica Vision night-vision binoculars help after-dark explorers to see the otherwise unseen
The Yashica Vision night-vision binoculars help after-dark explorers to see the otherwise unseen
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The Yashica Vision night-vision binoculars help after-dark explorers to see the otherwise unseen
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The Yashica Vision night-vision binoculars help after-dark explorers to see the otherwise unseen
The Yashica Vision night-vision binoculars feature an 850-nm IR illuminator with three-levels to enhance visibility "even in the most challenging light conditions"
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The Yashica Vision night-vision binoculars feature an 850-nm IR illuminator with three-levels to enhance visibility "even in the most challenging light conditions"
The Yashica Vision night-vision binoculars are water- and dust-resistant to IP65 standards
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The Yashica Vision night-vision binoculars are water- and dust-resistant to IP65 standards
The Yashica Vision binoculars have a night-vision range of up to 600 meters, as well as daytime focus from 50 cm to infinity
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The Yashica Vision binoculars have a night-vision range of up to 600 meters, as well as daytime focus from 50 cm to infinity
The Yashica Vision night-vision binoculars could help bring hidden danger to light
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The Yashica Vision night-vision binoculars could help bring hidden danger to light
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Last year, Duovox launched a successful Kickstarter for a full-color 1080p night-vision monocular. Now Yashica is live on the platform with a pair of night-vision binoculars that bring a touch of color to the darkness at up to 4K resolution.

The Yashica name has been associated with the manufacture of cameras and lenses since 1949, but its parent company Kyocera shuttered operation in 2005. The trademark was subsequently acquired by Hong Kong's MF Jebsen Group, which launched a Yashica-branded "digiFilm" camera called the Y35 on Kickstarter.

Now the company has returned to the crowdfunding platform with the Vision, a pair of 4K full-color night-vision binoculars. The technology designed to reveal otherwise hidden details on after-dark adventures starts with a 1/2.9-inch-type CMOS image sensor and a three-level, 800-nm IR illuminator.

There's a F1.0 wide aperture seven-layer lens with anti-glare coating (in addition to being scratch-, water-, dust- and oil-resistant), the focus range runs from 50 cm to infinity, the system offers 3x optical and 5x digital zoom, and has a reported light sensitivity of 0.0037 lux.

The Yashica Vision night-vision binoculars feature an 850-nm IR illuminator with three-levels to enhance visibility "even in the most challenging light conditions"
The Yashica Vision night-vision binoculars feature an 850-nm IR illuminator with three-levels to enhance visibility "even in the most challenging light conditions"

Real-time visuals are displayed on a 4-inch color TFT display at 400 x 960 pixels, with Yashica reckoning that users can look up to 600 m (1,968.5 ft) into the darkness. The setup is able to snap stills up to 56 megapixels as well as capture video at native 1080p, but with the option to upscale to 4K UHD, for storage on a microSD card (not supplied).

The company also says that artificial intelligence is used to enhance the device's signal processing chops for "more natural color reproduction and a higher dynamic range" – tweaking key parameters to reduce such things as image noise, enhance contrast and apply light compensation. That said, the sample images are still somewhat grainy in appearance but Yashica promises that the "intelligent algorithms and big data" behind the tech should see continual improvements over time.

The Yashica Vision night-vision binoculars could help bring hidden danger to light
The Yashica Vision night-vision binoculars could help bring hidden danger to light

Rounding out the key specs is a 5,000-mAh battery that's reported good for up to 10 hours of use with the IR illuminator powered up or 16 hours with it off. Other useful tools cooked into the binoculars include a compass and safety/signal light.

In development since February of last year, the Vision binoculars are now funding on Kickstarter, where pledge levels currently start at US$139 – representing a saving of 45% on the expected retail price. The usual crowdfunding cautions apply, but if all goes to plan with the already-funded campaign, shipping is estimated to start from May. The video below has more.

YASHICA Vision - Night in All Its Glory

Source: Yashica

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1 comment
1 comment
Brian M
That does look suspiciously like other products on the market. As it has an IR illuminator suspect its not a real 4K (or lower resolution) star light camera, but a cheaper IR with illuminator.

Might possibly have a visible light sensor trying to pick up colour information (hence the F1 aperture) and imposing that on the IR image. Somethign others are doing as well.

So maybe comes under heading 'engineered by marketing'! Although if its real, then that would be impressive but won't hold by breath!