CMT Captured at 500fps with Cavitar Welding Camera

When shooting any form of video with any device regardless of it being a high end cinema camera, a mid range DSLR, or even your mobile device, you are simply taking a certain number images at a certain time which is referred to as frames per second (fps) and seeing these images back to back is the actual video much like a classical “flip book”. Typical fps for movies and TV are 24, 29, or 30 which is why you have certain motion blurring effect while those reality shows that look weird (but very clear) are shot at 50 or 60fps. The higher the fps numbers, the more frames you have and the crisper your final footage; higher fps means you can slow it down to a certain degree without looking “choppy” but a super smooth look is achieved instead. Since higher fps means more details, this is why high speed imaging is an excellent tool for R&D and analysis. While a 30fps is enough for daily tasks such as process monitoring, if you manage to capture more frames, you can then use the footage to slow it down to a much higher level while retaining all the beautiful details whenever required. Our latest product, Cavitar Welding Camera (high speed version) is capable of recording up to 500 fps which means you can get footages with beautiful details whenever your company wants to analyze a certain defect, or want to identify how a small parameter can affect the process. To illustrate this, we recorded a footage at 500fps of a CMT process and slowed down to just 5%. . . . . . . #weldingsmostwanted #weldinglife #weldingart #weldingschool #weldporn #mig #mag #migmag #weldingmachine #weldingtraining #weldingcareer #weldingaddicts #weldingmostwanted #weldingtipsandtricks #weldingnation #MAGwelding #welder #weldingforlife #laserillumination #Cavitar #seethroughbrightness #seewhatyouhavemissed #WeldingCamera #WeldingView #500fps #weldingcamera #CMT #welds #weldingcamera
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