![]() “With our boost series, the goal is to augment our existing offerings for applications such as medical, automation, and traffic with higher-speed CoaXPress 2.0 cameras,” says Thomas Karow, Product Market Manager, Basler. Customers can benefit from smooth integration of both components via one software development kit, even for complex applications, according to the company. ![]() Both models feature a new Micro-BNC connector and the company’s Bundle package (Figure 1) offers a CXP-12 interface card. The boA4096-93cm (monochrome) and boA4096-93cc (color) cameras feature Sony’s 8.85 MPixel IMX255 CMOS sensor and reach speeds of up to 93 fps. Based on the 12.29 MPixel IMX253 Pregius CMOS sensor from Sony (Tokyo, Japan these cameras offer frame rates of up to 68 fps. A data-sharing capable device must have more than one link and each link (or sub-device) must be a standard CoaXPress link.īasler (Ahrensburg, Germany offers four CXP 2.0 cameras in its boost series, including the boA4112-68cm (monochrome) and boA4112-68cm (color). Another new feature in CoaXPress 2.0 defines rules for data sharing, where a device simultaneously streams data to more than one host. These counters are incremented whenever a link-related problem occurs, and the error reporting application can read or reset these counters via GenApi. All event messages are timestamped using Unified Time Stamping, and the device can inform the application through the new channel when specific internal events occur.Īlso introduced with CoaXPress 2.0 is a series of counters providing users with a clear view of the link quality during operation. A new communication path introduced in CoaXPress 2.0, the event channel, provides the device a mechanism to asynchronously send messages and status updates to a host. With this, host and device maintain an internal and independent free-running time clock, and both host and device will timestamp internal events with their respective time clocks: “t-dev” for device events and “t-host” for host events. CXP 2.0 also supports Micro-BNC (or HD-BNC) connectors, which can handle the high frequency signals required at speeds of 12.5 Gbps.ĬoaXPress 2.0 also offers Unified Time Stamping, allowing reporting events coming from devices, hosts, and software into a unified time reference. The standard also increases the up-connection bitrate from host to device from 20.83 Mbps to 41.6 Mbps for CXP-10 and CXP-12. ![]() In addition to higher speeds, a CXP 2.0 link with four CXP-12 connections supports a data transfer rate of up to 50 Gbps, which is sufficient to operate a 10-bit, 12 MPixel area scan sensor at more than 300 fps. “The new CoaXPress 2.0 specification includes several important new features and improvements which include new uniform time stamping, improved error reporting, data sharing, new speed ranges up to 12.5 Gbps, support for new HD-BNC connectors, as well as further electrical and mechanical improvements.”Ĭyros adds, “The reason they should be thought of separately is that the new features and enhancements in the CXP 2.0 version of the standard applies to all CXP speeds, and not just new CXP-12 speeds made possible with CXP 2.0.” Though CXP 2.0 extends to CXP-12, they are not synonymous, explains Mike Cyros, Vice President of Sales and Support, Americas, Euresys (Angleur, Belgium “While there is an association between CXP-12 and CXP 2.0, these should really be thought of as different items,” he says. Unlike USB3, which relies on passive cable lengths of two meters or less, CoaXPress 2.0 also maintains the 100-meter maximum length coaxial cables without the need for repeaters which can negatively impact signal integrity. With CXP 2.0 comes new features, functionalities, and speed ranges above the previous limit of 6.25 Gbps (CXP-6) to speeds of 10 (CXP-10) and 12.5 Gbps (CXP-12). Version 2.0 offers an extension of the Japan Industrial Imaging Association’s (JIIA Tokyo, Japan CoaXPress standard, which was first introduced as a standard in 2011. ![]() While CoaXPress 2.0 products were introduced at VISION 2018 in Stuttgart, Germany, the standard became official in 2019. ![]()
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