@@MaiseyJ-mp4rw "it's the time when you going to sleep"? What the fuck does that even mean? Did you get kicked out of the first grade or something what the hell is wrong with your literacy?
Magic? If you pay attention, you'll notice, until it's 100% black, the image is in color. At 100% black, the image is no longer in color. Presumably, the light is infrared. You're not going to see it when visible light is drowning it out.
well its also a fake video. see in the ''100% dark'' theres actually outside light on shed. you see it on the night vision scope as a normal light but suddenly cant see it with normal camera? xD its edited video to make it look much better than it really is
@@chrismeister2554 Exactly! I can't tell you how many people I've gotten at airsoft because they have shitty digital night vision and it's just a beacon for anyone with real nvgs 😂
Yes that is a night vision camera mounted on the shed. True night vision goggles are not cheap because the infrared sensor is so sensitive it does not actually need an infrared emitter to be able to see in the dark. These goggles are no different than any other night vision out there with the exception of they have an extremely powerful infrared emitter. It's actually so powerful you can see the emitter with the naked eye. And since the entire point of night vision goggles is to be able to see in the dark without being seen in the dark, these do not meet this criteria. Kind of interesting how they didn't show you the other side of the goggles in the dark.
It's a special type of light that can be seen by the night vision, infrared if I'm not wrong, the nvg sees that light and processes it into visible light, without the light that nvg would be cooked
@@generaln.gabriel1240 it’s not technically Night Vision I don’t think, it’s basically just an infrared camera, same as trail cameras, your basically shining an invisible flashlight, anyone with another pair of these or real night vision goggles would see you literally lighting your surroundings and yourself
If you are really dedicated, you can shine a laser directly into the lens... but for doing ANYTHING other than making spy film intros it takes forever and you wouldn't be completely aware
@@uddesheyakhanna5871but it’s like without the ir light, you can see the trees but not how far or close they are, like it could look in front of the shed instead of behind it
Actually infrared lights. Invisible to the naked eye but visible to this camera where it makes it visible to you by displaying it in visible colors. These are used in security cameras to provide them night vision and their night vision just takes advantage of the extra ir light provided by cameras and such.
@FrostyBastion if you have a vr headset like the oculus quest that uses cameras to track controllers you will see ir light emissions due to the cameras they use essentially giving you night vision while in pass-through mode.
@FrostyBastion yep. from quest 1 to 3, it uses ir cameras. Adding an ir light on the side to illuminate your path makes it work better, but it's not really worth it unless you're trying to play vr in the dark.
You two aren’t very smart! It’s from the camera attached to the shed that uses IR rays as night vision, on the camera it would be black and white however IR rays are not visible to the human eye, through the night vision lens they are using, IR light is visible and the tint is green.
@@masonmock9144 The typical green we all know is because certain night vision devices use green phosphorus, and the colour green is what our eyes are most sensitive to. This guys night vision device uses white phosphorus, thats what gives that blueish look, and is less straining on the eyes compared to the vivid green.
@@masonmock9144 no look at the surroundings. He clearly lowered exposure but turns it up as he shows the view through the NV camera. That's what they're saying.
Thats IRS type of nightvision. Just a toy for ordinary people. For sole military guy with night vision IRS users would look like very bright light sources( mayachki ).
I went to a Panera Bread with my grandpa when i was younger. They had apparently lost power. We walk in and he yells, "MAN it's black in here!" Most of the patrons in there were black. I wanted to die.
@@randomperson294unless it’s some special infrared lightbulb to illuminate the IR camera. Some things will illuminate light for stuff like this but it will be dark to the naked eye. (It could be real is what I’m saying)
@@rionvnvBut the lights are invisible, which does give you a tactical advantage against someone with a flashlight (Also, most goggles come with IR lights built in so you don’t need some outside form of light to be able to use it properly)
@@trilikvlt It's not a scope it's a cheap handheld device that also has very little FOV so it'd basically be suicide to use in anything but a specific niche application. It's also incredibly low resolution and pixelated so you're not going to be hitting accurate shots even if you have it perfectly zeroed
@@liu3chanthat’s IR light either coming from a motion activated light or a security camera. He’s using cheap digital night vision so anyone using digital or analog night vision goggles will see a similar “flash light” looking thing coming off of his forehead. IR makes you super obvious to anyone using nvg’s.
@@lo2rap You are the one who needs to read properly before commenting. This night vision can see clearly because it uses infrared from the CCTV, hahaha. CAPITALS
It's active illumination night vision. That light on the shed is likely the infrared light of a motion sensor, which is the same light that this nv tube both emits and captures. So yeah, you're basically right.