

🚀 Elevate your Raspberry Pi projects with pro-level vision clarity!
The Raspberry Pi Industrial Camera Module CAM-MIPI462RAW features a 2MP Sony STARVIS IMX462 color CMOS sensor delivering 1920x1080 resolution at up to 60fps. Designed for Raspberry Pi compatibility with built-in drivers supporting Bullseye libcamera and Raspbian, it excels in low-light and infrared applications thanks to its advanced sensor technology. Its wide-angle lens support and adjustable focal length make it ideal for industrial, surveillance, and night vision projects, backed by user-friendly documentation and custom design services.








| ASIN | B0B5G84PQ8 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,548 in Single Board Computers (Computers & Accessories) |
| Brand | innomaker |
| Customer Reviews | 3.8 3.8 out of 5 stars (34) |
| Date First Available | June 30, 2022 |
| Item Weight | 1.41 ounces |
| Manufacturer | innomaker |
| Number of Processors | 1 |
| Operating System | Debian (Raspbian) |
| Package Dimensions | 4.17 x 2.99 x 1.73 inches |
| RAM | LPDDR2 |
| Series | CAM-MIPI462RAW |
| Wireless Type | Infrared |
F**S
IMX462 is great for low light -- but you should know what you are getting
I am writing regarding the Sony IMX462 sensor board. The IMX462 is part of the line with the IMX290/327/462 and is meant for use in industrial or commercial applications. It has great sensitivity to long wavelength light (700nm+) so it is great for night vision with IR illumination. I replaced the stock lens with a "uxcell 8mm Focal Length 1080P F2.0 1/2.7 Inch Wide Angle" available on Amazon. It has no IR cut filter so IR light will pass through it. It is connected to a Raspi Zero W. It needs a converter cable to connect to the Zero due to a different pin size. The Pi OS comes with a driver for the IMX290 which works with the 327 and the 462, but it also has a driver for a 462 which works. The seller says to use the 290 driver but I tried both and they both work so I am using the 462 (it still appears as a 290 though, so who knows what is going on). It uses the Pi's hardware ISP to process the sensor image, so if you aren't using a Pi I don't think it will work. There is no way to get this to display on another computer unless you connect it to the CSI lane and have a specific driver for it and the ISP tuning file. It also relies on the Pi's hardware video encoder to encode the video -- if you don't do this you will get a raw SRGB stream. It will not fit in normal Pi camera enclosures. You should really know that you want this specific sensor and board for a specific purpose. It is specifically good for surveillance, night vision, industrial, or astronomical applications. I am using it with a cold mirror (visible light cut filter) and an IR light to grab images of otherwise un-imageable surfaces. It works great for that. This is my /boot/config.txt entry: #Camera dtoverlay=imx462,clock-frequency=74250000 #camera_auto_detect=0 Here is the output I get from some Pi commands which may be useful for you: $ libcamera-vid --list-cameras Available cameras ----------------- 0 : imx290 [1920x1080] (/base/soc/i2c0mux/i2c@1/imx290@1a) Modes: 'SRGGB10_CSI2P' : 1280x720 [60.00 fps - (320, 180)/1280x720 crop] 1920x1080 [60.00 fps - (0, 0)/1920x1080 crop] 'SRGGB12_CSI2P' : 1280x720 [60.00 fps - (320, 180)/1280x720 crop] 1920x1080 [60.00 fps - (0, 0)/1920x1080 crop] --- $ libcamera-vid -n -t 0 --inline --listen --height 1080 --width 1920 --framerate 60 --denoise off -o tcp://0.0.0.0:5000 Overriding H.264 level 4.2 [0:11:13.274240440] [658] INFO Camera camera_manager.cpp:299 libcamera v0.0.4+22-923f5d70 [0:11:13.556635700] [659] INFO RPI raspberrypi.cpp:1476 Registered camera /base/soc/i2c0mux/i2c@1/imx290@1a to Unicam device /dev/media2 and ISP device /dev/media0 Mode selection: SRGGB10_CSI2P 1280x720 - Score: 5000 SRGGB10_CSI2P 1920x1080 - Score: 3000 SRGGB12_CSI2P 1280x720 - Score: 4000 SRGGB12_CSI2P 1920x1080 - Score: 2000 Stream configuration adjusted [0:11:13.608129200] [658] INFO Camera camera.cpp:1028 configuring streams: (0) 1920x1080-YUV420 (1) 1920x1080-SRGGB12_CSI2P [0:11:13.611289169] [659] INFO RPI raspberrypi.cpp:851 Sensor: /base/soc/i2c0mux/i2c@1/imx290@1a - Selected sensor format: 1920x1080-SRGGB12_1X12 - Selected unicam format: 1920x1080-pRCC
C**R
Some open questions, but what I can see seems good.
Full disclosure: The project I was going to use this for has been put off for at least three months as I shift my project from Raspberry Pi 4 to Raspberry Pi 5 and complete other work. However, I've gone over the hardware, looked at the Github files, and reviewed the manual (such that it is). This review is based on that effort and I will update it after implementation. Also, I am an amateur, but not a complete newbie, so take this as you will. All in all, the hardware seems fine, the pin-out information in the manual is clear, the included ribbon connector seems fine. Importantly, there is only one open issue for this on Github, and that is a general question about use for non-Raspberry Pi boards. From the board layout, hardware installation will be easy, and the board and camera itself seems to have a good build quality. Obviously, functionality will be basic, but for the price and likely use cases (like mine), that is fine. I do wonder about overall support for this camera (separate from the customer support email address which is clearly listed in the documentation), given the manual appears to have only been updated one time since introduction in 2021, and that one open ticket I previously mentioned was never responded to, nor just assigned and closed if handled through a separate channel. Net, I get this review has serious limits, but since this was a "free" product I felt I needed to provide what I did know, and I also saw some other reviews that seemed to be negative in ways that seemed...unlikely to be representative. Unless there is some obscure issue, this seems worth at least four stars.
D**.
Powerful little camera
I hesitated because of some bad reviews but I think those who wrote them may not understand the Pi camera interface or innomaker didn't have updated instructions. If this is your first time integrating a camera to a Pi there is a learning curve. I have gathered such great time-lapses of the night sky I have lots of people asking what my setup is and they are absolutely amazed that its this little camera. I got this to work on allsky(using imx219 identity) and indi-allsky (as native identity). Id suggest a pi with more ram and proc than the 3b to run this but it does still work. Im rating this 5 because this is a perfectly capable product that does exceptionally well especially for night sky. With some adjustments to the videos it will even begin to pick up milky way. Pic is a partial screen cap of 15 seconds of ISS transit
M**H
I have yet to see ANYONE GET THIS Camera working on a Raspberry!
Pivariety drivers are a total joke. Will not operate on any version Pi or Pi OS. WASTE OF TIME! No support from Innomaker! You ask Innomaker for a way of installing a WORKING set of drivers and all you get is a link to a spec sheet that shows you the dimensions of the camera! ha, ha! I think the business plan is to continuously send these junk cameras out OVER and OVER again until they find enough Amazon customers who won't bother to check if they actually work!
B**N
Driver support? Support period?
I am unable to load these drivers in ubuntu/rpios lite. I've tried compiling some drivers based on some search work but its still coming up empty handed. The github is a pdf spec sheet.
V**D
Great product
H**O
暗所性能が高く、夜間や低照度環境でも映像がはっきりと映るのが魅力です。色の再現性も自然で、細部までくっきりと捉えられます。Raspberry Piとの接続もスムーズで、ドライバの認識に手間取ることもありませんでした。libcamera環境でも安定して動作し、遅延やフレーム落ちが少ないのも好印象。筐体はコンパクトで扱いやすく、自作プロジェクトや監視カメラ用途にぴったりです。
D**E
...Using this with 'Buster' and Pi3 (legacy installation). Follow the straigtforward wiki instruction/installation, you should be able to get the preview mode running overlay (from a ssh terminal), for unknown reason the overlay is not redrawn after termination of preview, probably a screensaver hotkey would fix it with a redraw... There are hot pixel(s), and will be visible with very long exposure. Interestingly, the best feature of this Sony Starvis sensor, after adjusting 'gain', you should get rather nice colour balanced long exposure (disregarding hot pixels), true to claim the very low lux performance.
5**ん
2025/10/24現在の最新OS 、ラズパイ4 MODEL B で使用 他の方のレビューを参考にしてもどうしても起動してくれなかった。 よくよく調べたらコマンドが変更されていた、、、 以下に方法を記す ・sudo nano /boot/firmware/config.txtを実行 ・エディタが起動する ・最下段 [all]セクションの下に以下追記 dtoverlay=imx290,clock-frequency=74250000 ・記入後上書き保存し、sudo rebootで再起動 ・rpicam-hello -t 0 で動作確認 libcameraコマンドがrpicamに変更されていた。ずっとlibcameraでやって半日潰したw
S**6
Es gibt verschiedene Anleitungen zur Installation der Treiber. Ein von Innomaker beschriebener Treiber war überhaupt nicht hilfreich. Letztendlich war an anderer Stelle bei Innomaker die Anleitung Libcamera327 zu finden. So funktioniert dieses Kameramodul auf Anhieb mit Libcamera. Das Kameramodul liefert sehr gute Bilder, aber Libcamera kann das Potenzial dieses Sensors nicht ansatzweise herausholen. Trotzdem ist die Leistung bei Dämmerung und schwierigen Lichtverhältnissen schon gut. Als Erstes werde ich eine bessere Linse installieren.
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منذ 3 أيام
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