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Vadzo adds HDR GigE cameras for drones and UAVs

10 hours ago
Vadzo adds HDR GigE cameras for drones and UAVs

By AI, Created 5:56 AM UTC, June 02, 2026, /AGP/ – Vadzo Imaging has launched two Sony STARVIS 2-powered GigE embedded cameras for drone and UAV use, with 4K HDR, PoE, ONVIF support, and remote over-the-air management. The new models target industrial inspection, perimeter surveillance, and other networked vision deployments where long cable runs and precise synchronization matter.

Why it matters: - Drone and UAV builders often need cameras that can sit farther from onboard compute, run over longer cable distances, and still sync cleanly across multiple sensors. - Vadzo Imaging is positioning the new cameras for those networked aerial workflows, while also keeping them suitable for factory automation, smart city, traffic, and surveillance deployments. - The built-in OTA platform is aimed at remote maintenance, which matters for payloads that are hard to retrieve or service in the field.

What happened: - Vadzo Imaging announced the availability of two HDR GigE embedded cameras: the Innova-678CRS and Innova-662CRS. - The company recommends both models for industrial drone and UAV applications. - The cameras are powered by Sony IMX678 STARVIS 2 and Sony IMX662 STARVIS 2 sensors. - Vadzo said the models are available now for evaluation and production orders.

The details: - The Innova-678CRS delivers 8.4MP imaging, 4K resolution, 120+ dB HDR, PoE 802.3af, RTSP streaming, NTP/PTP synchronization, GPIO, and ONVIF Profile S/T/G/M support. - The Innova-678CRS uses a Sony IMX678 STARVIS 2 sensor in a 1/1.8-inch format with 2.0 µm pixels and a 105° diagonal field of view. - The Innova-678CRS operates from -30°C to 70°C and weighs 20g. - The Innova-678CRS is designed for tethered industrial inspection drones, infrastructure monitoring, offshore platform surveillance, and smart traffic systems. - Vadzo offers zoom lens configurations for the Innova-678CRS through its optics customization program. - Compact non-PoE versions of the Innova-678CRS are available on request with 5VDC or 12VDC input. - The Innova-662CRS pairs a Sony IMX662 STARVIS 2 sensor with 2MP FHD resolution, up to 60fps, Clear HDR, NIR sensitivity, a 200° diagonal field of view, onboard dewarping, PoE 802.3af, RTSP streaming, NTP/PTP synchronization, and ONVIF Profile S/T/G/M support. - The Innova-662CRS uses a 1/2.8-inch sensor format with 2.9 µm pixels. - Vadzo says the Innova-662CRS is built for wide-area perimeter and surveillance UAVs, where the ultra-wide view can reduce the number of cameras needed. - Compact non-PoE versions of the Innova-662CRS are also available on request with 5VDC or 12VDC input. - Both cameras support the Vadzo NXT software platform and the VISPA NXT SDK for network control, streaming control, user management, and camera configuration in C, C++, and Python. - Both cameras include a built-in OTA platform for remote firmware updates, maintenance, and troubleshooting. - Vadzo says optics customization, including zoom lens configurations, is available for specific aerial inspection and surveillance needs. - The company also offers non-PoE variants for builds that need a lighter power architecture. - Vadzo lists more products and contact information at the company’s website.

Between the lines: - Vadzo is leaning on GigE as the core differentiator because it supports longer cable runs than USB and is better suited to payloads separated from onboard compute. - The pitch around ONVIF, RTSP, NTP, and PTP suggests the company is targeting buyers who want cameras to plug into existing security and industrial video systems without custom integration work. - The split between a high-resolution inspection model and a wide-angle surveillance model gives Vadzo two distinct UAV use cases instead of one generic platform. - The inclusion of metadata support through ONVIF Profile M points to a push toward AI-enabled analytics and multi-sensor deployments.

What’s next: - Vadzo is taking orders and offering evaluation kits for the two cameras. - OEM drone integrators can request non-PoE variants, zoom optics, and board customization. - Vadzo says interested customers can contact its engineering team through its website or by phone for customization requirements.

The bottom line: - Vadzo is betting that drone and industrial vision buyers want embedded cameras that are network-ready, remotely manageable, and easier to integrate into existing infrastructure.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

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