Manufacturer | Seek Thermal |
---|---|
Part Number | LT-AAA |
Item Weight | 8.3 ounces |
Product Dimensions | 1.6 x 0.8 x 0.6 inches |
Country of Origin | USA |
Item model number | LT-AAA |
Batteries | 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Size | CompactXR |
Color | Black |
Style | iOS |
Pattern | Camera |
Wattage | 5 watts |
Item Package Quantity | 1 |
Number Of Pieces | 5 |
Type of Bulb | Infrared |
Special Features | Portable |
Included Components | Focusable Lens, Waterproof Case Included, 206 x 156 Thermal Sensor |
Batteries Included? | No |
Batteries Required? | No |
Battery Cell Type | Lithium Ion |
Warranty Description | 1 Year Warranty for Manufacturer Defects |
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Seek Thermal CompactXR – Outdoor Thermal Imaging Camera for iOS, Black (LT-AAA)
Return this item for free
Free returns are available for the shipping address you chose. You can return the item for any reason in new and unused condition: no shipping charges
Learn more about free returns.- Go to your orders and start the return
- Select the return method
- Ship it!
Return this item for free
Free returns are available for the shipping address you chose. You can return the item for any reason in new and unused condition: no shipping charges
Learn more about free returns.- Go to your orders and start the return
- Select the return method
- Ship it!
Return this item for free
Free returns are available for the shipping address you chose. You can return the item for any reason in new and unused condition: no shipping charges
Learn more about free returns.- Go to your orders and start the return
- Select the return method
- Ship it!
Purchase options and add-ons
Brand | Seek Thermal |
Connectivity Technology | Wireless |
Special Feature | Portable |
Indoor/Outdoor Usage | Outdoor |
Compatible Devices | Tablet, Smartphone |
About this item
- Transform your smartphone or tablet into an outdoor thermal camera with a 206 x 156 thermal sensor to help you find people and animals at night or in low visibility
- Find people and animals at dawn, dusk, and over long distances where visible light is limited. Extra range detection also increases your visual perception and awareness to improve personal safety
- Perfect tool for the outdoorsman, hunter, or anyone searching for people and animals
- Does not require batteries or charging. Waterproof case included. Free Seek mobile app.Thermal Sensitivity < 70 mK
- SPECS: 206 x 156 Thermal Sensor, 20° Field of View, < 9 Hz Frame, Focusable Lens, -40F° to 626°F Detection Range, Captures Photos & Videos, Spot Temperature, High-Low Temperature, Threshold Mode, 9 Color Palettes
- Seek CompactXR is a highly portable, versatile and durable thermal imaging camera that plugs directly into your smartphone. This device translates thermal energy (infrared light) into a visible image on your phone.
- CompactXR’s narrow, 20 degree field of view is ideal for outdoor use, providing a detection range of up to 1800 feet, nearly twice the range of the Seek Compact.
- With a detectable temperature range of –40 to 626 degrees Fahrenheit, tracking wildlife, spotting predators, and identifying intruders are just a few of its multitude of use cases.
- CompactXR’s focusable lens allows users to fine-tune their thermal imagery. It also comes with a pocket-sized, waterproof carrying case.
- Seek CompactXR is perfect for hunters, hikers, campers, boaters and homeowners.
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Customer Review: Exactly what it should be. Just what I needed!
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Product Description
Seek Thermal XR Imager is a multipurpose camera. Tracking wildlife, spotting predators, and identifying intruders are just a few of its multitude of use cases. Cellphone accessory comes in black color and is 7 inches long x 4 inches wide x 2 inches. This thermal resource has 1 pound of weight and is easy to carry. The iOS specific XR imager is a great tool to carry along and capture some of the best shots and spot things. Imaging processor includes a pocket-sized, waterproof carrying case. Compatible with: iPhone XS Max, iPhone XS, iPhone XR, iPhone X, iPhone 8 Plus, iPhone 8, iPhone 7 Plus, iPhone 7, iPhone SE, iPhone 6s Plus, iPhone 6s, iPhone 6 Plus, iPhone 6, iPhone 5s, iPhone 5c, iPhone 5
Product information
Technical Details
Additional Information
ASIN | B00SSZ5KPY |
---|---|
Customer Reviews |
4.0 out of 5 stars |
Best Sellers Rank | #12,978 in Industrial & Scientific (See Top 100 in Industrial & Scientific) #9 in Thermal Imagers |
Date First Available | January 26, 2015 |
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5 watts
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Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers like the ease of use and value of the security camera. For example, they mention it's user friendly, intuitive, and cheap. That said, opinions are mixed on performance, image quality, temperature range, size, and focus.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the security camera easy to use. They say the app is intuitive, and the camera is easy to capture images. Customers also say the tutorial is informative, and it comes with a waterproof case. They mention that the camera can focus down to a few inches, making circuit-board troubleshooting easy. Overall, customers find the product to be a really cool little tool.
"...Finally, the imager comes with a cute, really well-designed and constructed hard little carrying case...." Read more
"...The camera app works well with my iPhone and is easy to use and capture images...." Read more
"...I do have to say that this tutorial is pretty informative.. The app is not intuitive and is hard to navigate and use if you do NOT go through the..." Read more
"...The app is absolute trash. It's not user friendly and is essentially one big sales pitch to get you to buy something else.-..." Read more
Customers like the value of the camera. They say it's a great thermal imager for the money, and is cheaper than any other thermal camera they've found. The app is free and does the bare minimum that you would expect from a security camera.
"...of data that will direct my work to make my house more comfortable, less costly, and more environmentally green...." Read more
"...If you want to get into the world of thermal imaging at a really reasonable price point, or you're just looking for a cool toy that's about the..." Read more
"...The other functions in the app work well. Good for the price and useful for the non professional." Read more
"...So, great thermal imager for its price (and if used with the right USB-C adapter and up-to-date Android phone)...." Read more
Customers are mixed about the performance of the security camera. Some mention that it does an adequate job, while others say that it doesn't actually work well. The quality is not bad at all, and the thermal image part of the app works OK. However, some customers say that the adaptor wouldn't work with their phone, and that the software is very basic.
"...I'm very happy with the performance/price ratio. Its' working really well and I anticipate getting lots of data that will direct my work to make my..." Read more
"...tiny plug-in for the bottom of my new Android phone, it's extremely impressive - I would have thought it had been delivered from an alien..." Read more
"...It's a nice idea but bad in function. They don't match up at all, so pretty much worthless. The other functions in the app work well...." Read more
"...The features were just unbelievable. Yet, something was wrong...." Read more
Customers are mixed about the image quality of the security camera. Some mention that the quality is surprisingly good, decent, and impressed by the detail and resolution of the camera. However, other customers say that the resolution is bad, the rendering is not as crisp as they were expecting, and the thermal imager has a fairly low resolution compared to regular camera sensors.
"...I did hesitate 'cuz of reviews reviews saying: image quality is terrible; the camera won't work unless you register; the camera steals information...." Read more
"...The image processing is fantastic, and I can always get the data that I need.Other thoughts:..." Read more
"...The Seek image is very, very pixelated, and the long time constant video averaging requires one to hold it it very steady or the image will smear..." Read more
"...Image quality is very good, though you can clearly see how low the actual resolution of the sensor is, and you can see small details well...." Read more
Customers are mixed about the temperature range of the security camera. Some mention that the various palettes, temperature readouts, and ability to set thresholds are impressive. They find the ability to see thermal details at an instant very impressive and fascinating. However, others say that the picture is a result of lack of temperature variance in viewed areas, the temperatures are bogus, and misleading. They also say the camera appears to be less sensitive to small temperature differences than expensive cameras and only shows surface temperature.
"...The visual/thermal swap feature is useful, as are the various color palates..." Read more
"...foam pads' from a big box store and later w/Great Stuff, it's still really cold. The cold even 'flows' down the wall and chills my sink counter...." Read more
"...plug-and-play thermal camera that creates useful, impressive thermal images and video on my galaxy s7. Well done Seek!2...." Read more
"...Did I know what I am doing or not. Up to you.The Seek Thermal looks great and is packaged like an iPhone...." Read more
Customers are mixed about the size of the thermal imager. Some mention that it's small, lightweight, and compact. They say it provides a record of their measurements if they're making a movie at the same time. However, others say that it no longer fits in its nice little plastic carrying case, it'll not fit on your camera if you have a cover on it, and the field of view is very narrow.
"...It's small and comes with a small case when you're not using it. The camera app works well with my iPhone and is easy to use and capture images...." Read more
"...Piece of junk.Pros:- Its small and comes with a carrying case.Ok... that's it. That's all I can come up with...." Read more
"...once you have the USB-C adapter on the thermal imager, it no longer fits in its nice little plastic carrying case...." Read more
"...You can see from the photos that it's a very small device...." Read more
Customers are mixed about the focus of the security camera. Some mention that it can focus down to a few inches, has an adjustable focus, and the ability to focus on near objects. However, others say that it's difficult to focus, the manual focus ring doesn't work, and it doesn''t auto focus.
"...Yes the Seek focus knob is a little tricky. It requires patience...." Read more
"...' thermal variances out to 1000 feet although it is limited to a 1x magnification and detail degrades in proportion to distance...." Read more
"...Focus is easy enough to use, similar to binoculars. But again, I have to state that my images are so grainy that focusing is sort of moot...." Read more
"The image quality is not bad at all, better than expected, need to adjust focus manually, which that is fine...." Read more
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In 2020 I air-sealed my attic & basement rim joists. I then discovered that exterior insulation (under the vinyl exterior) was poorly installed. I looked at 6 more houses in other communities and found the same result...i.e. look "under the hood" of your house and you're likely to find crummy workmanship that reduces your energy efficiency.
I want to kill drafts and save $$ heating/cooling my house (and my kids houses). Where to focus my effort? A thermal camera would help, but I can't afford a pro camera. So for 2-3 weeks I read dozens of reviews on affordable thermal cameras. This Seek camera stood out due to the many favorable reviews. I favored the Seek over its nearest competitor because Seek has the higher pixel count. I did hesitate 'cuz of reviews reviews saying: image quality is terrible; the camera won't work unless you register; the camera steals information. But some excellent reviews addressed these issues for me, so now I'll add my experience. It may help others who'll consider this for future purchase
APP ACCESS TO PHONE:
I did NOT need to give the Seek app access to my phone. I did NOT need to register the camera. Here's what I did. I dug up my 2014 LG G3 phone (no SIM card). I charged it, connected to a guest network, snapped the camera into the phone port and I installed the Seek Thermal app. Pop-up windows appeared asking for access to camera, photos, mic. **I denied access**. To my delight, the thermal camera image nevertheless appeared and I was quickly seeing images! Yes the Seek focus knob is a little tricky. It requires patience. When you change the focus knob you need to wait 2-4 seconds for the image to update. If you're not patient the focus knob could appear to be useless. I also adjust my range further/closer to the target of interest as part of my focusing process. Well, in less than 5 minutes I was getting the hang of it and could easily recognize my thermal images. This was especially true when I switched the color palette. For me, 'amber' screen images were very clear.
Here's the limitation in my strategy. Because I denied app access on my phone I couldn't save thermal images as I walked around my house. For many uses that doesn't matter. Looking for a hot, or cold or wet spot? There it is - problem identified and you never needed to grant the app phone access or register the camera. But if you're surveying areas in your house like I am (for work when Spring returns) it could be cumbersome to record/diagram/inventory all the needs. You probably already saw that I attached pictures to this review, so yes, took the next step and gave the Seek app access to storage on my old LG G3. Then I could walk around cataloging areas that need work. When I stopped using the camera I disconnect it from the phone, powered off my G3 and put them both in a drawer.
CAMERA FIT:
I bought the older micro USB style. It snapped into my phone and is a very rugged connection. There's no danger of the camera falling out even if I shake the phone. It would require dropping the camera or solidly smacking the phone on something to dislodge the camera. I did have to remove the hard-shell case and rubber cover from my LG phone to fit the camera, but this is a minor issue.
BATTERY LIFE: I agree that the camera is a battery drain. I walked around with the camera on for ~30 minutes and my phone battery went from 98% to 62%. Your experience will differ. For sure my 5+ year old G3 phone battery is nowhere near its original 3000mAh. May be best for you to guess you'll get an hour of power before your phone will need juice.
Temperature accuracy:
I brought a pot of water to boil on my stove and viewed thru the Seek compact camera. The imaging spot jumped around due to the rigorous boiling, and was reporting temperatures of 207-210 degF. Or, when I image a person, the camera shows readings of 96-97 degF. These are both more than good enough for the current and expected work I plan with this camera.
IMAGES (attached)
One pic is my fireplace. You can see logs in the fireplace. The heart-shaped glow centered above the fireplace is a hanging wreath at room temp (bright). You can see the horizontal mantle, the candles on the mantle and even draped decoration. Lower left corner reading of 78F is the edge of a charging plug.
Another picture is of my front door - poor insulation around the door perimeter. The door window showed 57F. I have clear heat-shrink plastic insulation covering this window. The thin plastic insulation might be invisible to the Seek camera and it might be reading the temperature of the inside surface of that window. The high temp reading in the lower right corner is from an adjacent heat register.
3rd picture shows exterior wall next to my kitchen sink. Can you see the dish-drying rack, a coffee filter cone and a wall plug and power cord on the right? What troubles me is the dark blob that's about in the center of the pic. It's . the light/disposal switches. Even though I previously insulated that plate with 'foam pads' from a big box store and later w/Great Stuff, it's still really cold. The cold even 'flows' down the wall and chills my sink counter. The Seek compact reveals that there's ~6" x 4" section in the wall cavity that's missing insulation. The camera revealed 3 other exterior wall outlets in my kitchen with the same missing insulation defect.
4th picture is a section of exterior wall. Maybe you can ID what it shows without my description and then decide for yourself if the image quality from the camera is useful.
I'm very happy with the performance/price ratio. Its' working really well and I anticipate getting lots of data that will direct my work to make my house more comfortable, less costly, and more environmentally green. Thanks again to the positive detailed reviews from people before me. Good luck to those of you considering this Seek compact camera..
Reviewed in the United States on January 24, 2021
In 2020 I air-sealed my attic & basement rim joists. I then discovered that exterior insulation (under the vinyl exterior) was poorly installed. I looked at 6 more houses in other communities and found the same result...i.e. look "under the hood" of your house and you're likely to find crummy workmanship that reduces your energy efficiency.
I want to kill drafts and save $$ heating/cooling my house (and my kids houses). Where to focus my effort? A thermal camera would help, but I can't afford a pro camera. So for 2-3 weeks I read dozens of reviews on affordable thermal cameras. This Seek camera stood out due to the many favorable reviews. I favored the Seek over its nearest competitor because Seek has the higher pixel count. I did hesitate 'cuz of reviews reviews saying: image quality is terrible; the camera won't work unless you register; the camera steals information. But some excellent reviews addressed these issues for me, so now I'll add my experience. It may help others who'll consider this for future purchase
APP ACCESS TO PHONE:
I did NOT need to give the Seek app access to my phone. I did NOT need to register the camera. Here's what I did. I dug up my 2014 LG G3 phone (no SIM card). I charged it, connected to a guest network, snapped the camera into the phone port and I installed the Seek Thermal app. Pop-up windows appeared asking for access to camera, photos, mic. **I denied access**. To my delight, the thermal camera image nevertheless appeared and I was quickly seeing images! Yes the Seek focus knob is a little tricky. It requires patience. When you change the focus knob you need to wait 2-4 seconds for the image to update. If you're not patient the focus knob could appear to be useless. I also adjust my range further/closer to the target of interest as part of my focusing process. Well, in less than 5 minutes I was getting the hang of it and could easily recognize my thermal images. This was especially true when I switched the color palette. For me, 'amber' screen images were very clear.
Here's the limitation in my strategy. Because I denied app access on my phone I couldn't save thermal images as I walked around my house. For many uses that doesn't matter. Looking for a hot, or cold or wet spot? There it is - problem identified and you never needed to grant the app phone access or register the camera. But if you're surveying areas in your house like I am (for work when Spring returns) it could be cumbersome to record/diagram/inventory all the needs. You probably already saw that I attached pictures to this review, so yes, took the next step and gave the Seek app access to storage on my old LG G3. Then I could walk around cataloging areas that need work. When I stopped using the camera I disconnect it from the phone, powered off my G3 and put them both in a drawer.
CAMERA FIT:
I bought the older micro USB style. It snapped into my phone and is a very rugged connection. There's no danger of the camera falling out even if I shake the phone. It would require dropping the camera or solidly smacking the phone on something to dislodge the camera. I did have to remove the hard-shell case and rubber cover from my LG phone to fit the camera, but this is a minor issue.
BATTERY LIFE: I agree that the camera is a battery drain. I walked around with the camera on for ~30 minutes and my phone battery went from 98% to 62%. Your experience will differ. For sure my 5+ year old G3 phone battery is nowhere near its original 3000mAh. May be best for you to guess you'll get an hour of power before your phone will need juice.
Temperature accuracy:
I brought a pot of water to boil on my stove and viewed thru the Seek compact camera. The imaging spot jumped around due to the rigorous boiling, and was reporting temperatures of 207-210 degF. Or, when I image a person, the camera shows readings of 96-97 degF. These are both more than good enough for the current and expected work I plan with this camera.
IMAGES (attached)
One pic is my fireplace. You can see logs in the fireplace. The heart-shaped glow centered above the fireplace is a hanging wreath at room temp (bright). You can see the horizontal mantle, the candles on the mantle and even draped decoration. Lower left corner reading of 78F is the edge of a charging plug.
Another picture is of my front door - poor insulation around the door perimeter. The door window showed 57F. I have clear heat-shrink plastic insulation covering this window. The thin plastic insulation might be invisible to the Seek camera and it might be reading the temperature of the inside surface of that window. The high temp reading in the lower right corner is from an adjacent heat register.
3rd picture shows exterior wall next to my kitchen sink. Can you see the dish-drying rack, a coffee filter cone and a wall plug and power cord on the right? What troubles me is the dark blob that's about in the center of the pic. It's . the light/disposal switches. Even though I previously insulated that plate with 'foam pads' from a big box store and later w/Great Stuff, it's still really cold. The cold even 'flows' down the wall and chills my sink counter. The Seek compact reveals that there's ~6" x 4" section in the wall cavity that's missing insulation. The camera revealed 3 other exterior wall outlets in my kitchen with the same missing insulation defect.
4th picture is a section of exterior wall. Maybe you can ID what it shows without my description and then decide for yourself if the image quality from the camera is useful.
I'm very happy with the performance/price ratio. Its' working really well and I anticipate getting lots of data that will direct my work to make my house more comfortable, less costly, and more environmentally green. Thanks again to the positive detailed reviews from people before me. Good luck to those of you considering this Seek compact camera..
First, the image resolution: if you're used to multi-megapixel digital photo cameras, forget about it - that's not what you're getting with the Seek, or any other thermal in a price range less than a Tesla (or two or three, or twenty). Thermal is about 20 years behind that, dollar for dollar (image worse than the first Nikon digital I bought back in '93-'94). However, the resolution is about four times what you'd get with the 1st gen FLIR One's Lepton imager. The Seek image is very, very pixelated, and the long time constant video averaging requires one to hold it it very steady or the image will smear (think 1/4 - 1/2 second hand-held still exposure steady on a conventional camera). Unlike FLIR's visual/thermal overlay (patented MSX), Seek requires you to swipe back and forth between the thermal and the camera's visual camera images in the app. You can capture visual or thermal, or half and half, but not one on top of the other. The result is a better thermal image and a better visual image on the Seek that may not look quite as good as the FLIR's MSX overlay as a captured snapshot. Some of my colleagues think the FLIR MSX approach is better at this price point. I disagree for now, but I can understand their argument.
Having a pretty low general opinion of the current state of what passes for software engineering, and even lower of Android apps, I can say that the Seek app is better than most Android apps I've used, especially at this level of maturity and adoption (its adoption isn't even a rounding error compared to a Google app). It installed cleanly on my new Moto G 2nd gen with Lollipop (the cheapest smartphone platform I could find that might support it, as my previous Nexus 4 would not). It hasn't crashed or locked-up, and it cleanly sends captured images to G-mail or Bluetooth. The visual/thermal swap feature is useful, as are the various color palates ("Iron" looks cool on ads, and in reports, but I've always used gray scale for serious work). I don't like the inability to set gain or freeze the AGC (something the new FLIR's app can apparently do), but I can live with that at this price point (for the time being). Thermal differential sensitivity in a low contrast scene seems to be pretty good - I'll take Seek's claim of about 0.1 degrees C as about right. I don't expect this to be a calibrated radiometer, or to use it as a substitute for a high quality imager for point medical screening, so I'm not going to get wrapped-up with actual vs. reported temperature values in the app (and no one wants to read a discourse on emissivity variations). I hope Seek (and FLIR) will have emissivity adjustments and calibration methods in the not-too-distant future (and some education, as I see a lot of misunderstanding and inflated expectation in some of the posts/reviews).
As a usability note: I lucked out with the Moto G 2nd gen; it wasn't listed as "supported" when I bought it, although the 1st gen G was, as was the Moto X, 1st and 2nd gen. I also lucked out that the USB is oriented in a way that the Moto's visual camera is pointed in the same direction as the Seek, so that a back-and-forth overlay or split is easy. Not sure I'd be quite as happy if I found that I had to use one of the extension USB cables to orient it with one hand, while holding the phone with the other.
Finally, the imager comes with a cute, really well-designed and constructed hard little carrying case. I can thrown it in my briefcase, backpack or cargo pant pocket, and not even think about it. Nice touch!
Bottom line: for those with a realistic understanding of the current state-of-the-art, this is amazing. If you want to get into the world of thermal imaging at a really reasonable price point, or you're just looking for a cool toy that's about the same price as a high-end 802.11 AC router, it's worth giving this a try. If you wait six months or a year, there will probably be something better. But, you'd probably still be using a typewriter and a Western Electric phone if that was the #1 consideration.
Reviewed in the United States on January 7, 2024