FLI R
Duo P ro R Us e r Guide
Duo Pro R User Guide, Rev. 1.0
Information on this page is subject to change without notice
38
6
File Formats
The Duo Pro R can save image data in a number of file formats, each with unique characteristics.
Table 3 gives a summary of the different file types. Read this section for more detailed explanations
of the available data types for still images and recorded video.
Type
Data Format
Extension
Bit depth
Notes
Still
8-bit JPEG
*_8b.JPG
8-bit
LWIR only, AGC & color palette applied
Visible image is contained in a separate .JPG
Radiometric
JPEG
(recommended)
*_R.JPG
8 & 14-bit
Contains both Thermal & Visible data in a single file:
640 x 512 8-bit thumbnail based on work mode
640 x 512 LWIR 14-bit Flinear data
12MP Visible image
TIFF
*.TIFF
14-bit
Tlinear data, radiometric parameters fixed at time
of capture
Visible image is contained in a separate .JPG
Video
8-bit
*.MOV
8-bit
Thermal only. AGC & color palette applied
Visible video is contained in a separate .MOV
14-bit (RJPEG)
(recommended)
*.SEQ
14-bit
Flinear data, radiometric parameters can be
adjusted in FLIR software
Metadata dynamic per frame
Visible video is contained in a separate .MOV
14-bit (TIFF)
*.TIFF
14-bit
Tlinear data, radiometric parameters fixed at time
of capture
Metadata only for the initial frame
Visible video is contained in a separate .MOV
Table 3. Thermal Image Formats Recorded on microSD Card
6.1
Visible Video Formats
Visible Video can be saved in 1080p or 4K formats. Both will be saved as .MOV files, but note that
4K video is not currently supported by Windows Media Player, so another video player will need to
be used.
Note: Each visible video file will be accompanied by a .SRT file of the same name. This is a subtitle
file that captures metadata (date, time, GPS coordinates, and altitude).
6.2
Infrared: Still File Types
6.2.1
Radiometric JPG
(or “RJP
E
G”, for short)
The Radiometric JPEG format of the Duo Pro R contains both thermal and visible image data in a
single file format. The file is composed of:
-
An 8-bit thumbnail image
-
A 14-bit thermal image
-
An 8-bit visible JPEG
This is FLIR’s recommended file type, because it captures the 14
-bit raw thermal image in a format
that can be easily post-processed using FLIR Tools and ResearchIR. The major advantage of RJPEG