Sony‘s launched a new image sensor, and while it may not be some 1-inch flagship phone sensor or a new stacked full-frame CMOS chip, it’ll almost certainly become the mainstay of one particular camera sector for the next few years.
Called IMX908, it measures a relatively modest 1/2.8-inches in size and has an 8.4-megapixel resolution. But this isn’t a sensor designed for capturing high-res stills. Rather, this marks the first sensor in Sony’s brand new STARVIS 3 range of image sensors designed for security cameras and dash cams.
Nearly high-end dashcams currently use Sony Starvis 2 image sensors (Image credit: BlackVue)
Right now, STARVIS 2 sensors can be found in almost every current mid- to high-end dash cam on the market. Their focus on high dynamic range makes them ideal for coping with the huge and unpredictable contrast variation encountered during driving.
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The STARVIS 3 IMX908 sensor is a back-illuminated design with a deep photodiode layer. This is said to provide high performance in low light conditions, as well as high sensitivity to the near-infrared spectrum – both important attributes for security and dash cam implementations.
The key to its performance are newly-developed LOFIC pixels. LOFIC – Lateral OverFlow Integration Capacitor – is Sony’s proprietary pixel technology developed for security cameras. Sony claims the tech can deliver nearly 20x the amount of saturated charge when compared to a first-gen STARVIS sensor, resulting in approximately 27% better low-light performance and a dynamic range of up to 96dB in a single-shot exposure. This is achieved without the use of multiple exposures – a more typical means of producing an HDR image – making the sensor better suited to capturing the kind of fast-moving subjects encountered in dash cam applications.
(Image credit: Sony)
We’ll still have to wait for STARVIS 3 sensors to show up in consumer products, but with intense competition in the dash cam sector, we probably won’t have to wait long.
Sony Starvis 3 IMX908 image sensor (Image credit: Sony)
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