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project:fisa-yiil

Fisa-Yiil: 365nm Reflected UV Surveyor

The Fisa-Yiil is a full-spectrum digital observation unit. By removing the internal filters of a Raspberry Pi HQ Camera and replacing them with specialized UV-pass glass, we can observe “Nectar Guides” on flowers and skin damage invisible to the naked eye.

When paired with the DayHawk flashlight at night, this camera captures a world of “UV-Greyscale” where white flowers can appear black and clear water looks like ink.

In the Yivalese conlang, Fisa means "Bee" and Yiil means "Gaze" or "Sight."

Together, this unit provides a true vision of the birds and the bees in the ultraviolet realm.

The Camera Surgery: Removing the "Veil"

The Raspberry Pi HQ Camera (IMX477) comes with a small pane of blue-tinted glass sitting directly over the sensor. This is the IR-Cut Filter.

  • The HQ Surgery: There are two small silver screws holding the filter housing inside the C-mount ring. This is the recommended path.
  • The Budget Surgery (Arducam): Requires a hot air gun to soften the glue on the lens housing to pry out the internal filter. Risk of melting the plastic or damaging the sensor.
  • :!: Danger: The sensor is now completely exposed. Any dust that enters will be permanent. Perform this in a “steam-cleaned” bathroom.

The Shiny Bits (BOM - Camera Edition)

Item Part Number Description Unit Cost (CAD) Note
The Sensor Variable RPi HQ ($70) or Arducam ($15) $15 – $70 HQ is recommended for UV sensitivity.
The UV Filter ZWB2 (25.5mm) UV-Pass / Visible-Block Glass $18 Crucial. Blocks all visible light.
The Glass 25mm C-Mount Quartz or “Simple” Glass Lens $35 Standard glass blocks UV; seek Quartz if possible.
The Brain RPi Zero 2 W Compact Processor $22 Small enough for handheld use.
The Display 3.5“ DPI LCD Real-time Viewfinder $30 Optional if using phone as viewer.

Total Est. Cost per Unit: ~$90 – $175 CAD.
(Low end uses Arducam + Phone as Viewfinder; High end uses HQ + LCD.)
(~$60 – $145 if using a Phone as the Viewfinder - No LCD needed.)
(~$38 – $123 if you have a spare RPi Zero as well.)

Using a Phone as a Viewfinder

If you want to save $30 and skip the physical LCD, you can use the Pi Zero's built-in WiFi:

  • Software: Use mjpg-streamer or libcamera-vid to host a local stream.
  • Connection: Set the Pi as a WiFi Access Point. Connect your Android/iPhone to the “Fisa-Yiil” network.
  • Viewing: Open a browser (Safari/Chrome) or a dedicated “IP Cam” app to see the live UV feed.
    Note: There is a slight (~200ms) lag, which makes precision focusing harder than a direct LCD.

Reflected UV: Why the Filter Matters

To see like a bee, your camera lens must have a ZWB2 (or UG1) filter attached to the front.

  • The Illuminator (DayHawk): Hits the flower with 365nm UV.
  • The Flower: Reflects some 365nm light and *fluoresces* (glows) some visible green light.
  • The Camera Filter: Blocks the green “glow” and only lets the reflected 365nm reach the sensor.

The Map (System Integration)

[ SYSTEM ARCHITECTURE: THE FISA-YIIL ]

      [ DAYHAWK (UV FLASH) ] ----> [ TARGET ] 
                                     |
                                     | (Reflected UV + Visible Glow)
                                     |
      [ ZWB2 FILTER ] <-------------/
            | (UV Only)
            v
      [ QUARTZ LENS ] 
            |
            v
      [ RPi HQ SENSOR ] (IR Glass Removed)
            |
            v
      [ RPi ZERO 2W ] ----> [ WIFI ] ----> [ SMARTPHONE ]
                           (OR)
                      ----> [ TFT LCD ]

Crow's Comments

  • Daylight Usage: The DayHawk is primarily for indoor or nocturnal use. During the day, the sun provides high ambient UV levels, making an external flashlight unnecessary for most outdoor shots.
  • The Arducam Warning: If using the budget Arducam, the fixed plastic lens may block up to 90% of incoming UV light even with the filter removed. Results will be much darker than the HQ sensor.
  • The “Black Sun” Effect: Under the sun, the world looks like high-contrast noir due to unique atmospheric scattering of UV light.
  • Focus Shifting: UV light focuses at a different point than visible light. Tweaking the focus slightly “shorter” than usual often helps.

Caw! Ready to see the secrets hidden in the petals?

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