OAK-FFC 4P PoE

Buy it on Luxonis shop

Overview

The OAK-FFC 4P PoE baseboard uses PoE for power and connectivity, and has 4 FFC interfaces which allows for:

To see which cameras are compatible with this OAK FFC baseboard, see the guide here: OAK FFC camera modules. Some of camera modules have a M12 mount, so you can use different lenses to get custom FoV (with wide or narrow FOV M12 lenses).

This board uses OAK-SoM-Pro and is also compatible with RPi camera interface. For that you will need a FFC from Arducam, which converts 26-pin Luxonis camera pinout to 22 pin RPi camera pinout.

This device also supports PoE passthrough, so you can daisy chain multiple OAK-FFC 4P PoE boards. As the chip is PoE 802.3af, it can supply up to 15.4W of power, which means you can connect up to 3 devices in a row (as each consumes ~5W of power). Note that if you have longer cables and/or utilize all available computation (NN, Stereo, CV, video encoder, CPU, etc.), it might be that you could only connect 2 devices in a row.

RVC2 inside

This OAK device is built on top of the RVC2. Main features:

Developing with the OAK FFC

After connecting cameras to the baseboard, you can use the utilities/cam_test.py script to quickly test whether cameras are working as expected. By default, it will try to run 2x mono cameras on 2-lane mipi ports B (left) and C (right) and 2x color cameras on port A (rgb) and D (4-lane mipi ports).

If you have different cameras connected, you can specify which camera types to use with the --cameras argument. For example, if you have 3x mono cameras connected to ports A, B, and C, you can run the following command:

python3 cam_test.py --cameras rgb,m right,m left,m

Similarly, to add such configuration into your script you can use the following code:

cam_a = pipeline.create(dai.node.MonoCamera)
cam_a.setBoardSocket(dai.CameraBoardSocket.CAM_A) # Same as CameraBoardSocket.RGB
cam_a.setResolution(dai.MonoCameraProperties.SensorResolution.THE_400_P)

cam_b = pipeline.create(dai.node.MonoCamera)
cam_b.setBoardSocket(dai.CameraBoardSocket.CAM_B) # Same as CameraBoardSocket.LEFT

cam_c = pipeline.create(dai.node.MonoCamera)
cam_c.setBoardSocket(dai.CameraBoardSocket.CAM_C) # Same as CameraBoardSocket.RIGHT

cam_d = pipeline.create(dai.node.MonoCamera)
cam_d.setBoardSocket(dai.CameraBoardSocket.CAM_D)

Dimensions and Weight

  • Width: 63 mm

  • Height: 34 mm (PCBA and heatsink)

  • Length: 125 mm

  • Weight: 81 g (PCBA and heatsink)

General information

  • 2x 2-Lane MIPI interface

  • 2x 4-Lane MIPI interface

  • PoE for connectivity and power

  • Interface for Luxonis OAK-SoM-Pro

  • Pads for OAK-SoM-Pro 1.8V Aux Signals (I2C, UART, GPIO)

  • PSRBS connector for FSYNC

  • Design files produced with Altium Designer 20

Minimal and maximal perceiving distances of the camera

Minimal depth perceiving distance of the camera depends on mono camera FOV, resolution, baseline and stereo depth mode, more info is available on the Stereo Depth documentation.

Since this device has modular mono cameras, you can choose a custom stereo baseline (depending on how it is set up). When using OAK-FFC-OV9282, the formulas for min/max depth perceiving distances are:

  • Min distance (800P) = 882.5 * baseline / 95

  • Min distance (400P) = 441.25 * baseline / 95

  • Min distance with extended disparity (800P) = 882.5 * baseline / 190

  • Min distance with extended disparity (400P) = max(441.25 * baseline / 190, 19.6)

  • Max perceivable distance (using subpixel) = baseline/2 * tan((90 - 71.9/1280) * PI/180)

For more information about the maximum distance see the Stereo Depth documentation.

FFC cables

For FFC cables we use Molex series 15166. Along with the OAK FFC board, we ship 26 pin count, same-sided, 152mm cables (part number 151660281). If you would like to use shorter/longer FFC cables, you can get them here.

Known errata

  • It is not possible to power the OAK-FFC-4P-POE via the USB-C connector. So to connect through the USB-C, you will need to power via RJ45 (POE).

Power consumption

Most of the power is consumed by the RVC2, so the power consumption mostly depends on the workload of the chip:

  • Base consumption + PoE circuitry + camera streaming: 3W - 3.5W

  • AI subsystem consumption: Up to 1W

  • Stereo depth pipeline subsystem: Up to 0.5W

  • Video Encoder subsystem: Up to 0.5W

So the total power consumption can be up to ~5.5W if you are using all the features at 100% at the same time. To reduce the power consumption, you can reduce FPS of the whole pipeline - that way, subsystems won’t be utilized at 100% and will consume less power.

Operating temperature

The ambient operating temperature of RVC2 based devices is between -20°C and 50°C when fully utilizing the VPU.

Similarly to the Power consumption, max operating temperature depends on VPU utilization. The higher the VPU utilization, the more heat the VPU will generate. The RVC2 VPU can continuously operate at 105 °C, after which the depthai library will automatically shut down the device (to avoid chip damage).

To find out more, see our Operative temperature range documentation.

3D Models

  • Board (PCBA) STEP files here

Files

Got questions?

Head over to Discussion Forum for technical support or any other questions you might have.