Arducam Pivistation 5 is an all-in-one Raspberry Pi 5-powered camera

John Aldred

John Aldred is a photographer with over 25 years of experience in the portrait and commercial worlds. He is based in Scotland and has been an early adopter – and occasional beta tester – of almost every digital imaging technology in that time. As well as his creative visual work, John uses 3D printing, electronics and programming to create his own photography and filmmaking tools and consults for a number of brands across the industry.

Arducam Pivistation 5

Arducam, who creates cameras and modules for embedded systems and electronics hobbyists has announced the Arducam Pivistation 5. It’s a Raspberry Pi 5-powered all-in-one camera kit that you build yourself.

Due to its modular nature, there are three different versions of the camera available. There’s the 64-megapixel autofocus Hawkeye, the ultra-low light Darksee and the 1″ 20-megapixel Klarity. All three are on Kickstarter right now.

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Arducam Pivistation 5 – Powered by Raspberry Pi

The Arducam Pivistation 5 is powered by the Raspberry Pi 5 4GB. This means that it runs Linux, so you can use it just like normal Raspberry Pi if you wish. You can experiment with all kinds of software from the many DIY Raspberry Pi-based cameras that have been released over the last few years.

Running a full operating system like the Raspberry Pi means that it’s probably updated more often than any camera you can buy from the likes of Sony, Canon or Nikon. And you have the ability to customise it to your needs.

Arducam Pivistation 5 Hawkeye

Do you want to run a web server on your camera or have it automatically upload images to the cloud? Well, it’s a Raspberry Pi, so you can do that pretty easily.

Available in three flavours

There are three versions of the Arducam Pivistation 5. They are the Hawkeye, Darksee and Klarity. Each of them is essentially the same, except for the camera module. Of course, the camera module isn’t just like swapping out a sensor, but pretty much all of the camera’s specifications.

Arducam Pivistation 5 Darksee

The Hawkeye contains the company’s 64-megapixel 1/1.7″ camera module with a built-in fixed lens. It offers an 84-degree field of view with an f/1.8 aperture and a minimum focus distance of 8cm. It also has phase-detect and contrast-detect autofocus.

The Darksee is the low-light model. It contains 1/1.8″ sensor that shoots 8-megapixel. This makes each pixel around 6.25 times the size of those on the Hawkeye, allowing it to capture a lot more light at night despite being a smaller sensor. It features an M16 lens mount

Arducam Pivistation 5 Klarity

The Klarity should also work quite well in low light. It’s higher resolution, at 20 megapixels, takes C mount lenses, sports a large 1″ sensor, and actually has larger pixels than the Darksee. This comes with an added cost, though.

All three cameras offer 10-Bit raw output, but the 64-megapixel Hawkeye also offers JPG, YUV and RGB output. All three modules contain rolling shutter CMOS sensors, and they have infrared-blocking filters, so they can only see visible light.

Arducam Pivistation 5 Specs

HawkeyeDarkseeKlarity
Sensor Resolution64MP8MP20MP
Sensor Size1/1.7″1/1.8″1″
Pixel size0.8 x 0.8µm2 x 2µm2.4 x 2.4µm
Output formatJPG/YUV/RGB/RAWRAWRAW
Video Resolution1920×1080 @ 30fps
1280×720 @ 60fps
648×480 @ 60/90fps
3840×2150 @ 15fps
1920×1080 @ 60fps
1280×720 @ 90fps
5472×3672 @ 6fps
3840×2150 @ 8fps
2732×1538 @ 25fps
1920×1080 @ 50fps
1280×720 @ 120fps
Photo Resolution9152×6944 pixels3856×2180 pixels5496×3672 pixels
Lens MountBuilt-inM16C Mount
Focal Length5.1mmN/AN/A
Aperturef/1.8N/AN/A
IR SensitivityFilter blocks all IRFilter blocks all IRFilter blocks all IR
Operating voltage5v5v5v
Power requirements7.5W7.5W7.5W

Price and Availability

The Arducam Pivistation 5 is currently running on Kickstarter. Pledges start at $139 for the Hawkeye, $179 for the Darksee and $279 for the Klarity. Items are expected to ship in August 2024.

Disclaimer: We only share crowdfunded projects we believe are legitimate. However, most of those projects are not in a delivery state. Make sure you look into the project and make an informed purchasing decision. While some projects may offer amazing rewards, others unfortunately may not deliver on their promises.

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John Aldred

John Aldred

John Aldred is a photographer with over 25 years of experience in the portrait and commercial worlds. He is based in Scotland and has been an early adopter – and occasional beta tester – of almost every digital imaging technology in that time. As well as his creative visual work, John uses 3D printing, electronics and programming to create his own photography and filmmaking tools and consults for a number of brands across the industry.

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One response to “Arducam Pivistation 5 is an all-in-one Raspberry Pi 5-powered camera”

  1. Cosmas K Avatar
    Cosmas K

    great innovation on digital camera attached to Raspberry pi. I wish to have one.