I don't think Dave owns them, so a tear down would be difficult. Fluke told him that they didn't want a teardown of their thermal cameras, and I suspect FLIR will be even more resistant to such an idea. When you own such an expensive bit of FLIR kit, you are often less enthusiastic about taking it apart ....the micro-bolometer engine is definitely not intended to be dismantled to component level. I have been repairing several industrial TICs recently and thankfully have not had to delve into the micro-bolometer module beyond simple voltage and waveform checks. Damage t this module = written off TIC. Mike did an excellent repair video on a FireFlir TIC that may interest you.
There actually isn't a great deal to see inside these units. There was a commercial costing investigation into an older FLIR i7 version detailed in another thread. The investigation showed the internal parts including the micro-bolometer sensor. As I have found myself when repairing TICs, it basically looks like (but isn't) a CCD chip fitted inside a vacuum chamber that has a germanium crystal window facing the Germanium optical assembly. A mechanical shutter assembly moves a shutter in front of the sensors window for regular calibration and pixel levelling. The output of the micro-bolometer sensor passes to an image processing chip that in turn passes the processed signal data to the video ADC which feeds the SBC microprocessor. An image is then generated on the LCD by the microprocessor image output stages.
The larger industrial grade TICs are far more complex and interesting in terms of build, but the simpler consumer grade units are really just a boring high density SBC and the micro-bolometer engine. They aren't that complex, just expensive on the engine and optics front.
I will see if I can find the link to the FLIR i7 strip down for you.
UPDATE: FLIR tear down added.
The Fluke will use similar technology but with a lesser micro-bolometer in a smaller imaging engine.