NEW 2012 Catalogue from Navitar
10 Jan 2012
Lambda Photometrics is pleased to release the NEW 2012 Catalogue from Navitar, which is now available to download.
Navitar, Inc. designs, develops, manufactures and distributes precision optical solutions across the globe. Whether you are interested in off-the-shelf commercial products such CCTV, high speed, high magnification, high resolution, telecentric, SWIR and large format lenses or have an application that requires a custom optical solution, Navitar's engineering and design team can work with you to create a lens system to meet your needs.
If you'd like a printed copy of the new catalogue, click here to contact us by email.
Call Clive Phillips or Mark Bambrick on 01582 764334 today to discuss your optical application and find out what we can do for you.
Latest Press Releases
- Overcoming limits – World's fastest standard VGA sensor meets the latest board level camera design
- New Motorized Tilt & Rotation Sample Holder for Phenom Desktop SEM
- New NanoRam for Hand-held Chemical & Pharmaceutical Inspection
- AirMicro – iPad/iPhone/iPod touch microscope system
- Lambda appointed by CI Systems: For all your Electro-Optic Testing Needs
- NEW 2012 Catalogue from Navitar
- VeriSens – a new generation of intuitive configuration
- Highest performance for superior demand: LED Light Source
- New Infrared material measurement service from Lambda Photometrics
- GemRam - Quick and easy gemstone identification solution
- Breakthrough 3D Optical Profiler for Accurate Surface Metrology on the Production Floor
- StreamPix 5/TroublePix High Speed Laptop Solution
- Non-contact multilayer film thickness measurement made easy
- New Test and Laboratory Controller for LED Lighting
- The New ODiSI, Enabling High Resolution Strain & Temperature Measurements
- IMPERX 29MP Camera Shipping NOW
- Greenlee XL fiberTOOLS
- Pre-configured Glacier X mini spectrometer for fluorescence spectroscopy
- POSITION FILLED Graduate Internal Sales Engineer - Photonics Group
- A new compact high resolution Raman spectrometer – the Glacier T