I was wondering what the minimal working distance of the Seek Thermal device is.
The minimal working distance is the minimal distance from the lens to an object with the requirement that the object is in focus.
I'm performing some research on liquid droplets (2 < 3 mm) which are several degrees hotter than the environment and I just need a thermal image of them (relative temperature is OK) without spending thousands of dollars of tax money. There are some cheap lenses available (ZnSe) which can help a lot with this experiment but it would be nice if there are some people who can provide me some values about working distances with and without these lenses.
It would also be great if someone just deposits a small droplet which is heated a bit on a surface, just to test.
Hey, I can do that!
My procedure:
Spread out some wax paper (non-wetting, non-absorbent) on a surface at ambient temp (~20C -- the Seek was indicating ~77F, but I think it's off considerably).
Get my hand wet with some tepid water. Splatter it onto the wax paper. Image it, and realize that the water's pretty close to ambient temperature, too.
Blow across the paper. Image again. Yep, the droplets have cooled evaporatively.
Now, get some HOT water (~40C) on my hand, and splatter it. Image again. See the nice blue-black cold droplets, and the nice yellow hot droplets.
Now, run and find a tape measure with a metric scale (that was embarrassingly hard), and get a
visual picture with it in the frame.
I was holding the camera at maybe 15cm distant for the thermal image. I tried other images at 5, 10, and 15cm, but it was a bit hard to tell anything definitive about resolution -- it's just plain fuzzy at
most distances. With these optics, I'm thinking the effective "as good as it's going to get" range is somewhere from 5cm to infinity. Others have posted
much more detailed imagery here to address that.
Things I'd do given unlimited time:
1. Set up a rig to hold the camera at fixed, calibrated distances from the target.
2. Use oil droplets instead of water to eliminate evaporative cooling.
3. Use a liquid-crystal mat to check the ACTUAL temperature of the droplets? I know I've got a liquid-crystal mouse pad somewhere around here...
...but, alas, none of this is likely to happen very soon. Busy week. If you've got suggestions for other
quick things to try, maybe I can help, but probably not tonight -- getting close to bedtime!