![]() This would be different symptoms then what you show on your video. So again your video allows us to discuss what normal "quirks" are of the device versus what is impending failure.įrom what I understand there are users who have experienced a complete failure whereby the devices image gradually dims and upping the brightness helps initially but eventually you run out of adjustment overhead, have a dim image and then ZAP. The pulsar may not be able to do it without a power down and power up to tell the digital circuitry that we are back to zero (rebooted). The human eye I would guess only needs a few seconds to achieve this. When the surge of light dissapates the CCD along with our eyes have to cool (color temperature not physically) to resume normal visibility. ![]() ![]() When a surge or "spike" of high intensity light is present there is recalibration occurring internally to render the image along with your human eye recognizing the change. You have a camera lense integrated with a digital CCD device onboard the unit that is reliant upon ambient light to render an image. Thanks for the video, I am not an expert on this device but I would say that the image rendered before and after the 4 minute mark are normal. ![]()
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