15.12.2019
Posted by 
Camera
  1. Etron Technology Inc. Usb2.0 Camera Driver Windows 7
  2. Usb2.0 Camera Driver

Currently searching eBay for ' will give lots of listings at the moment which all appear to be the same model camera (some come in different colours, e.g. Some list the number of pixels as 12.0, or 16.0 with interpolation, whereas the supplier I picked put 30 mega pixels without the weasel words 'software interpolation'. There is no manufacturer's name given in the listings - some show a generic 'PC Camera' box (mine came in a jiffy bag). There are similar looking examples on the Amazon Marketplace, e.g., and at Play.com, e.g., with minor differences in the writing on the focus ring or the base. It is possible the internals vary.

The main board in mine is made by as determined by the writing on the chip (see below). Under Linux, I could only get up to 640x480 pixels, which is 300k or 0.3 mega-pixels. It seems like the eBay seller is two orders of magnitude out by claiming 30 mega-pixels!6 LED webcamThe writing on the lens says Megapixel 10X Digital Zoom f=3.85mm which would be fine if I could get even one megapixel out of it! That silver section on the top is a button - presumably to take a snapshot if your software supports it. The cable is as advertised 120cm (4 foot), the last 15cm (6 inches) of which are forked for the separate USB and microphone 3.5mm jacks.What I thought looked interesting on this webcam was the six LEDs, controlled via a dimmer switch on the cable about 20cm (8 inches) from the camera. The dial is surprisingly sensitive in the range you might want to use it - and blindly bright at full power from screen distance. If you try adjusting this while using it for video chat, expect to suffer accidental afterglow on your retina for a while afterwards.LEDs onLEDs offThe base works OK on a flat surface, but the 'clip' is almost useless for attaching to a monitor or laptop screen.

Etron Technology Inc. Usb2.0 Camera Driver

Etron Technology Inc. Usb2.0 Camera Driver Windows 7

The trouble if is just free standing and you touch the LED dial the webcam is so light it wobbles and moves. Having the cable coming out of the back of the camera unit itself doesn't help either. Even trying to do the above photo without the webcam moving much was a pain!I actually bought this to use on my work computer for occasional conference calls. Sadly it doesn't have a microphone input socket.

It does have a line in socket, but it appears a microphone would need amplification to register anything. I guess I need a webcam with a proper USB microphone instead.On the plus side, the claimed focus range from 3 cm seems true.Testing in low lightThese comparisons put this 6 LED webcam (left column) up against an unmodified Xbox Live Vision webcam (right column), under various lighting conditions. The images were captured using Apple's Photo Booth application (no control over settings).6 LED webcam (moderate light, LEDs off)Xbox Live Vision (moderate light)Notice the 6 LED camera has a narrower field of view, while the Xbox camera is more yellow looking. They both perform adequately on with moderate light, but the Xbox live looks a lot better with less light. 6 LED webcam (indirect light, LEDs off)Xbox Live Vision (Indirect light)Of course, this is where the new webcam's built in LEDs come into play - so let's turn them up full and see what happens:6 LED webcam (indirect light plus its own LEDs)Xbox Live Vision (indirect light plus other cam's LEDs)6 LED webcam (light from its LEDs only)Xbox Live Vision (light from 6 LEDs only)This is perhaps unfair - the distance is just over 3m and I'm sure that's more than the designers had in mind with the LED design!InsidesNot being too worried about damaging it, I opened it up. The lens rim unclips, which also frees the silver plastic decoration under it. Then there are two small Phillips head screws holding the case together (one hidden behind a sticker).

Usb2.0 Camera Driver

Remove them, and the two halves of the case open, freeing the top silver button, and the stand.Opened, microphone top leftPCB front, showing sensorPCB Back, EtronTech eSP268There is a small blue PCB taking six wires soldered and covered in glue. I presume the group of four are the USB cables (GND, +D, -D, VCC) while the extra pair connected on the other edge go to a variable resistor in the cable dial switch to control the LED brightness. There is also a small button switch which the silver top button connects to.Also coming down the cable are two more wires (together in a blue cover) to a small 5mm or so cylinder which I deduce is the microphone (electrically this appears to be completely separate from the USB circuitry).On the front of the PCB the lens unscrews to reveal it includes the red glass filter, and expose a very small image sensor.The main chip on the back of the PCB reads: EtronTech eSP268A7 P254609 H6S247.11This is how USB device identifies itself via the Mac command systemprofiler SPUSBDataType. As expected from the claims of plug and play without drivers, this is a. From a Google search with these USB IDs, it appears thesame chip/sensor is also used in many other devices including a miniclip on webcam with retractable lead (and no microphone) and even amicroscope camera!

This download provides USB 2.0 WebCAM driver and is supported on VIAK8M AWRDACPI that is designed to run on Windows Operating System Only.Device TypeimageDriver Version1.0.3.6OS Support2K,XP,2K3,VISTA,WIN7/32bitsXP,VISTA,WIN7/64bitsDriver Date2011-07-12Manufactureretron techYou are viewing the drivers of an anonymous computer which may be not the same with your current computer. These driver(s) may not work with your computer. Please click on the link below to download, scan and get the correct drivers.from Others.