Positioning your IR Inspection
Port:
Once you have decided on the viewing material
that best suits your requirements and operating environment,
the next step is to decide where you want to position your
IR inspection port. The thermographer must first identify
the target components that he wishes to measure during his
inspection program; once this has been completed the following
areas will need investigating prior to finalizing the IR
inspection port specifications:
A common mistake made during new installations
is calculating the position of the IR windows prior to the
final installation of the equipment and the fitting of all
associated cables, etc. BEWARE
DO NOT try to calculate FOV or install your IR
windows unless you know exactly where the new cable runs
and cable positions are in the new installation, this will
save you time and expense by ensuring you only purchase
the correct size and quantity of IR windows to fulfill your
requirements.
Field of View
The inspection port diameter needed is a function
of the lens field of view and the distance from the inspection
port to the component in which the thermographer needs to
see. Traditionally the total field of view is calculated
by multiplying
Two
times the distance by the tangent of one half the angle.


Some manufacturers advocate increasing the
FOV by a multiplication factor of 6, this is however impractical.
A good practice for thermographers is to not have too extreme
an angle of incidence from a perpendicular target, this
should not exceed 30° were possible.
We therefore recommend that thermographers
never use a multiplication factor in excess of 3, exceeding
this can cause problems and give poor results due to extreme
angles, internal obstructions, etc. We also recommend that
a maximum multiplication factor of 2 is used during your
calculations to maintain the image integrity and identifying
any fault locations, and you may increase this to a multiplication
factor of 3 if there are no internal obstructions, etc.
Finally we advise that if you need to work to extreme angles
that you consider using wider angled lenses if possible.
Click
here to enter Field of View calculation page.
Note: The distance
units will be in local units i.e. if you input inches it
will calculate in inches, input cm it will calculate cm,
etc.
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