In my opinion, regardless as to what people are charging, they are going to kill the goose that laid the golden egg.
This began as a hobby effort, it's been fun and challenging, but by this fix becoming so public and becoming commercial, sooner or later you have to expect a serious response from FLIR. They will plug up the holes and
I wouldn't be surprised that there could be some legal retaliation.
I've needed technical support from FLIR from time to time, that was paid for when I bought my camera, but
circumventing their product line will in the end hurt all of us, and I'm referring to making these modified
cameras available on the commercial market. By the way, FLIR has provided me with excellent support,
I just had to dig a little deeper in their organization for some good help.
The same thing happened with satellite decoders and cable TV boxes, it was fun while it lasted but it was made
too public.
Enjoy it while you can, but I fear the free ride will come to an end. My two cents worth.
Hope I trimmed the thread a little.
Jim
He (i'm guessing you) is selling it as a hacked device. Both immoral and unprofessional. If you're selling an E4 don't mark it up 30% because you screwed around with the firmware.
Well I'm from the UK, not the US
Cost of camera = $995
Cost of eBay & Paypal fees at $1398 = $195
Cost of US postage (guess) = $30
TOTAL = $1220
$1398 - $1220 = $178 Profit.
In my opinion $178 is a fair profit for the seller who is providing a known working hacked camera and taking all risks including: