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Ch 3 – Preparing to Take a Picture
Image Setup Options
User’s Guide to the SPOT Cooled Color Digital Camera, 6/9/98
31
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Note: For more information on the concept of gain, refer to Chapter 1, Electronic
Imaging Theory and the SPOT Camera.
Adjustment Factor (Auto-Exposure)
Use the Adjustment Factor option to modify the automated exposure settings determined
by the SPOT camera. The Adjustment Factor defaults to a setting of 1 (i.e., 1x the
exposure times determined by the Auto-Exposure setting.) The Adjustment Factor is
used to deliberately over-expose or under-expose an image. The Adjustment Factor
option can be used if:
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An image that you captured (using the default Auto-Exposure settings) comes out too
bright or too dark. In this case, you can re-capture the image using a different
Adjustment Factor to compensate for the excess brightness or darkness.
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You use the SPOT camera to take pictures of printed circuit boards or other metallic
objects. In this type of situation, the Adjustment Factor allows you to over-expose
the image in order to burn out the glints that appear when capturing images of
metallic objects. Over-exposing the glints is necessary to correctly expose the non-
glinted areas.
To set the adjustment factor, click on the scroll bar, and enter a number between .25 and
32.
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Note: The software includes two default Image Setups that you can use to handle
images with glints: Glints #1 and Glints #2.
White Balance (Auto-Exposure, 24 and 36 bit RGB)
White balance is the ratio of red, green, and blue exposure times necessary to achieve the
proper color rendition for an image. Many factors impact the coloration of an image
capture, including lamp voltage, the coloration of the glass used in the slide, and the
coloration of the glass used in the lenses of the microscope’s objectives. In order to
minimize the impact of these factors, the Compute White Balance feature samples the
color of the light from your light source after it has passed through your slide and the
objective’s lenses. and calculates the exposure values needed to produce images where
the white areas are white and the color areas are true.
You should perform a new white balance calculation in the following cases:
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When you start a new image capture session.
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When you change the lamp voltage.
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When you switch to a different objective on the microscope.