1-800-942-0528 Home My Account Items In Cart:  0   Total: $0.00     View Cart

Enter keyword or #
Search
 
Accessories
Cameras - Digital & Video
Digital Camera Adapters
Digital Microscopes
Forensic
Gout Microscopes
Industrial
Inverted
Metallurgical
Polarizing Microscopes
Professional Biological
Stereo Microscopes
Students - Cordless
Students - Elementary
Students - High School
Students - University
Teaching Handbooks
Teaching Videos
Video Flex Imaging
 
Microscope News and Information
On this page we post information pertaining to microscopes and microscopy. We try to update this page frequently, so you may wish to bookmark this page and check back often to learn more about the vast world of microscopy!
Microscope C-Mounts and Image Sensors

Past Microscope Info

A microscope c-mount adapter is used to connect a microscope camera to the microscope trinocular port. A c-mount adapter has a standard 1" (or 25mm) diameter male thread. This thread matches with the female thread on the camera. C-mount adapters are microscope specific in that the lenses are made to match up with your specific microscope. For example, you would not want to use an Olympus C-Mount adapter on a Meiji microscope. This would most likely result in an image that is not parfocalled, or is not in focus at the same time that your eyepieces are in focus. C-Mount adapters have lenses in them in order to match up with the similar magnification you are seeing through the eyepieces. If you were to use a c-mount adapter with no lenses built into it you would see more magnification than what the eyepieces are currently seeing. This is due to the inherent magnification with image sensors and microscopes. Although this setup can work, most people generally prefer an image that looks similar to their field of view through the microscope.

Measuring with a Microscope

Parfocal Objectives

Infinity Corrected
Optics

Microscope Resolution

Matching Chip Size with C-Mount Adapters

To compensate for too much magnification at the camera, or to most closely match the field of view in the microscope, you will need a c-mount adapter with a reduction lens built into it. The chart on the right lists the suggested adapter to use when using 10x eyepieces in your microscope, based on the chip size in the camera.

Camera Chip
Suggested
C-Mount
1/4"
0.265x or 0.3x
When using 20x eyepiece you will generally move up one step in magnification. If you had a 1/2" chip with 10x eyepiece the corresponding c-mount would be 0.45x or 0.5x. With 20x eyepieces you would want to use the 0.7x c-mount adapter.
1/3"
0.3x
1/2"
0.45x, 0.5x or .6x
If you were to use a camera with a 1/2" chip in it with a 0.7x c-mount adapter the camera would still work, you would just have a smaller field of view and more magnification at the camera than you would see through the eyepieces.
1/1.8"
0.45x, 0.5x or .6x
2/3"
0.7x
Image Sensors

Image Sensor Size ImagesCameras have image sensors that are fairly small. The most common image sensor sizes are shown at left. The smaller the sensor, the more inherent magnification. The larger the camera sensor, the better the resolution will be with less magnification.

Image resolution is key in most microscopy imaging applications and therefore 1/2" and 2/3" chip cameras usually offer a good balance between magnification, resolution and the size of the actual image the camera is viewing.