Inicio —> Productos

Productos

Every machine vision system starts with light. Without the right illumination, even the most advanced camera and software cannot deliver reliable inspection results.

RODER Vision designs and manufactures LED illuminators in Italy for automated optical inspection, quality control, and industrial vision applications. The product range covers bar lights, ring lights, backlights, flat domes, and spot illuminators — available in multiple wavelengths, form factors, and protection ratings up to IP69.

All illuminators are built around proprietary HTTM thermal management technology and undergo mandatory 48-hour burn-in testing before shipment. The result is consistent luminous output, long operational lifespan, and integration-ready construction for OEMs and system integrators.

Por qué la iluminación es la variable crítica en la visión artificial

Every machine vision system depends on one fundamental element: light. Camera resolution, processing algorithms, and optical configurations all contribute to inspection performance — but none of them can compensate for inadequate or poorly chosen illumination. The right LED illuminator defines contrast, suppresses surface noise, reveals defects that would otherwise remain invisible, and ensures repeatable image acquisition across thousands of production cycles.

RODER Vision designs and manufactures industrial LED illuminators in Italy, combining optical engineering, proprietary thermal management technology, and rigorous production standards to deliver reliable illumination solutions for automated optical inspection, quality control, and industrial vision systems worldwide.

El portafolio de productos RODER de un vistazo

The complete illuminator range is organised into five product families, each engineered for specific inspection geometries, working distances, and application requirements.

Bar Lights — DL Series Bar illuminators are the standard solution for direct, high-intensity front illumination over rectangular fields of view. The DL series covers compact OEM modules through to ultra-high-power strobed configurations for high-speed production lines. Available wavelengths include white, red, blue, green, and infrared. The DL10 series adds IP69K protection for food processing, beverage, and washdown environments. The DL1L series extends continuous linear illumination up to 3000mm for line scan camera applications and web inspection systems.

Ring Lights — DC Series Ring illuminators mount concentrically around the camera lens axis, providing uniform front illumination without shadows or directional artifacts. The DC series ranges from low-angle configurations optimised for surface defect detection and scratch visibility to flat high-density matrix rings designed for compact integration in space-constrained systems. Large-format versions support wide-field inspection where standard ring geometries are insufficient.

Backlights — BL Series Backlight illuminators transmit light through or behind the inspected object, creating a high-contrast silhouette against a uniform bright background. The BL series is the preferred solution for edge detection, dimensional measurement, presence/absence verification, and translucent material inspection. Available in multiple sizes and wavelengths, with ultra-uniform output and integrated constant-current drivers for stable, repeatable image acquisition.

Flat Dome Illuminators — FD Series Flat dome illuminators generate diffuse, omnidirectional illumination that eliminates shadows, reflections, and specular highlights. The FD series is the correct choice for inspecting highly reflective surfaces — polished metals, glass, lacquered components, and curved or irregular geometries — where directional lighting would produce glare or uneven contrast. Low-profile design allows close-proximity mounting in machine integration projects.

Spot Lights — DL3M Series Miniature spot illuminators provide focused, high-intensity illumination over small fields of view. The DL3M series is designed for point inspection tasks, fine detail analysis, and applications where installation space constrains the illuminator footprint. Despite compact dimensions, output intensity is comparable to full-size matrix illuminators.

How to Select the Right Illuminator Family

Choosing the correct illuminator starts with four questions. Answering them systematically eliminates incompatible options and leads directly to the right product family.

1. What is the inspection geometry? Define the shape and size of the field of view and the working distance between the illuminator and the inspected surface. Bar lights cover rectangular or elongated fields. Ring lights cover circular fields aligned with the camera axis. Backlights require access to both sides of the object. Flat domes require close proximity mounting above the surface. Spot lights are for small, localised fields.

2. What surface characteristic needs to be detected? Surface defects on matte materials respond well to direct or low-angle illumination — bar lights or low-angle ring lights. Defects on reflective or polished surfaces require diffuse illumination — flat dome or dome configurations. Profile, edge, and dimensional features are best revealed by backlighting. Embossed text, fine scratches, and surface texture variations benefit from darkfield or low-angle geometry.

3. What is the required wavelength? Wavelength selection controls contrast between the feature of interest and the background. Red light (620–640nm) enhances contrast on dark or organic surfaces. Blue light (450–470nm) improves resolution on PCBs and metallic components. Green light (520–530nm) is effective on a wide range of industrial materials. Infrared illumination (850nm and above) penetrates packaging, silicon, and certain plastics. White light is appropriate for colour-sensitive inspection tasks or when multiple features require simultaneous analysis.

4. What are the environmental and integration constraints? Standard industrial environments are served by the full DL, DC, BL, and FD series with anodized aluminum housings and vibration-resistant M8 connectors. Food processing, beverage, pharmaceutical, and washdown environments require IP67 or IP69K-rated illuminators — the DL10 series is specifically engineered for these conditions. OEM machine builders requiring modular scalable configurations benefit from the 100mm incremental architecture of the DL5 and DL7 series.

Diseñados para el rendimiento. Diseñados para durar.

All RODER Vision illuminators integrate proprietary HTTM thermal management technology — a material-level heat dissipation system that maintains stable luminous flux across the full operational lifespan, preventing the chromatic drift and output degradation common in standard industrial LED products. Every unit undergoes mandatory 48-hour burn-in testing before shipment, validating electrical stability, thermal performance, and optical consistency under continuous operating conditions.

For system integrators and OEM machine builders requiring application-specific configurations, RODER Vision also provides custom illuminator design, modified form factors, and dedicated technical support for integration projects.

Contact the RODER Vision technical team for product selection support, application analysis, or custom illuminator specifications.

Contacto para información general : info@roder.it
P
artner de integración de sistemas y sensores : www.roder.it
División de Visión Artificial de RODER : www.rodervision.com
División de Instrumentos de RODER : www.innovacheck.com
Más información sobre RODER VISION : about us

La información de este sitio web se proporciona únicamente con fines informativos. Aunque ha sido preparada con el mayor cuidado, no constituye una oferta contractual ni un compromiso vinculante de suministro. Puede contener errores de transcripción, traducción o tipográficos. Para obtener información precisa y actualizada, póngase en contacto directamente con nuestra empresa.

Tenga en cuenta: Algunas imágenes de este sitio web han sido generadas intencionadamente mediante Inteligencia Artificial (IA). Esto se debe al hecho de que, para muchas aplicaciones y proyectos, no es posible divulgar fotografías de la instalación o sistema real debido a acuerdos de confidencialidad, cláusulas contractuales y acuerdos de no divulgación (NDA).