Video Surveillance Cameras
For Car:
Video Surveillance Cameras
Make Your Car Road-Worthy
By Nahshon Roberts
Your vehicle darts along the road, continuing to speed faster
and faster.
You
press on the brakes, and discover you've lost control over the
vehicle's breaking system! Seconds later, you hit a wall. Proving
Newton's law that "for every action there is an equal and opposite
reaction," your head whips back against the headrest. The airbag,
which ballooned on impact, cushions your head. With your cranium
buried in the inflated airbag, you
feel like a dummy, and that is precisely what you are - a crash
test dummy. To optimize what they could learn from you, researchers
had placed a video surveillance camera on the wall. Such cameras
remain useful throughout the life of an automobile.
The Production From start to finish, the production of an
automobile is a very precise and meticulous process. Video
surveillance cameras are vital in ensuring that quality control is
always maintained. They are mainly used for inspecting many parts,
verifying that parts have been positioned properly and in 3D
guidance of robots. For instance "smart" cameras are frequently
used in various stages of automobile production. The camera helps
robots "learn" certain parts. The robots, in turn, use a "vision
processor" to verify that a correct product has
been installed.
Along an automobile assembly line, video surveillance cameras
are also used to monitor the totally automated installation of the
windshield and rear-window. Cameras ensure that parts, such as
panels, have been positioned accurately onto the vehicle's
body.
The Testing
Many tests are conducted on automobiles. These are carried out
to improve their quality and safety. One example is the crash test.
High speed cameras, which can capture more frames 
per second than other cameras, are used. The camera helps to
detail what happens to the passenger and automobile during
the crash. Due to the high cost of crash tests, these cameras are
invaluable in helping researchers obtain as much data as possible
from the test. A video surveillance camera can be used for other
types of tests on cars. For example, the road test checks whether
or not the car is worthy to be driven on roads. Lastly, a video
surveillance camera can be used to enforce quality control at
emissions test centers, where the amount of
pollutants that a vehicle produces is tested.
The Protection In addition to assisting in the production and
testing of automobiles, video surveillance cameras can also be used
to safeguard automobiles from auto theft, a grave problem in
America. Consider the following statistics.
* Every year, over one million vehicles are stolen in the United
States.
* In 2005, the 2001 BMW M Roadster was the most frequently
stolen passenger vehicle in the United States.
* In 2006, more vehicles were stolen in Las Vegas than in any
other metropolitan area in the United States.
Mounted in places such as driveways, parking lots, parking
garages, and car alarm stores, video surveillance cameras are
valuable in protecting one's investment. In addition to capturing
visual evidence against car thieves, they also serve as a deterrent
for those who are thinking about taking someone else's Jaguar, Road
Runner, or Bug.
There is no doubt that from the assembly line to the junkyard,
video surveillance cameras shift gears to play vital roles in the
lives of automobiles.
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