Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.
Using the Raspberry Pi Camera to see through the mirror
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@Synthic Infrared is blocked by cameras anyway so that wouldn’t make a difference. The only thing the camera cares about is visible light so if you are able to see through the mirror you are using then there is no reason that the camera shouldn’t be able to do the same thing regardless of what material the mirror is made from.
I too have the basic PiCam located behind the glass and it works perfectly. Does your cam work without the glass in place?
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@dpenney That’s what bugs me:
- The PiCamera works great normally
- I can see through the mirror
- My Nexus 5 camera can see through the mirror
- The PiCamera can not. (it CAN, but it is waaaay too dark)
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@Synthic That is frustrating…
I think the facial recognition module uses python-picamera to talk to the camera, are you able to tweak the configs somewhere in order to up the brightness?
https://www.raspberrypi.org/documentation/usage/camera/python/README.md -
This is where the camera is setup - try adding
camera.brightness = 90https://github.com/paviro/MMM-Facial-Recognition/blob/master/facerecognition/picam.py
Worth a shot :)
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@Synthic I can tell you that my nexus 5 camera does not like my glass at all, al tough, the light transmission on my mirror is really low.
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@dpenney This is my setup:
This photo is with normal camera:
This photo with PiCamera:
With brightness=90, I tried screwing around with most settings without result.
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Yeeesh that is dark - although even the pic with the normal camera is really dark. Much less contrast than I was getting, perhaps you do have a bad camera as the quality definitely shouldn’t be that poor.
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@Synthic
Hi Synthic, Please may I ask what module you used to display the PiCam feed in MagicMirror?
Regards -
@Synthic Hi, here my cam through my mirror on daytime and with lights and my setup. All pictures later…
This one cam through mirror with lights.