Been lurking for a while... had my seek thermal for a while. Avid viewer of Mike & Dave's channels for years now.
My unit has about 2 to 3 degrees thermal gradient (measured against a foam blank) so it's not as extreme as the one in Mikes video. I can't justify modifying it for such a small difference, especially with the risk of damaging parts under the lens housing. At most it causes minor colour variation in the display output, for example, in this image (top left corner):
A larger concern that I have is what seems like a USB access issue on the Galaxy S4. There seems to be some issue when the app requests permission from the user to use the USB slot. It often ends up with garbled noisy display giving extremely high temperatures (thousands of deg C) and the shutter goes insane. The issue is resolved by unplugging the camera and attaching it again, and the problem comes and goes seemingly randomly. By luck this happened when I first connected the camera, and I thought I had a dud.
Overall I am very impressed with the unit at its $199 value. Although I had to get it shipped by a third party to Australia, so it was really closer to $290 USD in the very end. And getting the app to work outside the USA was a bit of a pain until I found some seemingly-legit apk downloading sites. If the product can be made available here for the normal price+exchange rate, I'd get a second one to play with 3rd party lens options.
The inherent issue with this forum is that it brings together a lot of experts and "tech tweakers" who will not be happy until they have a FLIR E8 equivalent device for $200 or a camera that outputs something like this (NSFW?)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BS46C2z5lVE. If I were to look for a "commercial quality" infrared pyrometer from a retailer here, it will be $150-250 and it will measure one spot, that is the extent of its functionality. The price point for these Seek Thermal devices has to be met and so the product will never be perfect. I still think it is an amazing product for the casual user, tradesman and tinkerer alike.
I've been playing around with some astronomy CCD / image processing programs to see what can be done with the noise. No amazing breakthroughs so far other than making smoother / poorly defined images.
Obligatory portrait pic: