Join us at SPIE Baltimore 2019, discover Additive Manufacturing part 2

Mar 19, 2019 | News

NIT will present at booth#224 at SPIE Defense & Commercial Sensing, Baltimore, USA from April 16th to 18th, 2019. Find out what NIT bring to SPIE. Until then, discover how SWIR cameras work in the laser process, in this case, additive manufacturing.

Join us at SPIE Baltimore.
Attending SPIE Defense & Commercial sensing 2019? We’re excited to meet you at booth #224 and share our expert guidance, technologies, and SWIR products for advancing your vision ability in your application.

What we bring to SPIE 2019

This year, at SPIE 2019, we will introduce our high-end camera WiDy SenS with new advanced updates. This new version of WiDy SenS makes it a cost-effective solution for your imaging challenge.

Our WiDy SenS series, High Sensitivity & High Dynamic Range SWIR cameras, with the Gated mode option, are capable of providing high-quality images in all lighting conditions.

Don’t miss the chance to test our SWIR cameras’ performances on-site and discuss with our experts to get the cutting-edge SWIR products.
Schedule our meeting in advance to have a quality discussion.

See you there from April 16th -18th, 2019!

Get to know more our SWIR cameras in action.

With many advantages of NIT SWIR cameras, such as HDR patented technology, anti-blooming native functions, high frame rate, working with lasers become simpler.

Following the first part of our case study – Additive manufacturing, this time, discover how our SWIR cameras give the ability to bring an extra eye on the melt pool or any similar conditions.

Want to get notification of our news?

Recent news

NSC1801-NIT Improves its Line SWIR sensor

NSC1801-NIT Improves its Line SWIR sensor

NIT Announces Updated NSC1801 - Line-Scan SWIR Sensor for Improved Performance NIT is pleased to announce the release of an updated version of its line SWIR sensor. The NSC1801 was initially designed to capture high-resolution images of linearly moving objects with...

How Do SWIR Cameras Work?

How Do SWIR Cameras Work?

Short-Wave Infrared (SWIR) cameras have become essential imaging tools across agriculture, defense, industrial and medical industries. These cameras utilize SWIR light in the wavelength range of 0.9-2.5 µm, which is invisible to the naked eye, to produce...