Scion Frame Grabber Driver

Thank you for posting on the forums. While National Instrument's driver and native IMAQ support obviously does not interface to third party boards, if your board does include a dll that allows you to control the frame grabber then you may be able to get the board working in LabVIEW. LabVIEW has a few options available for calling dlls, and this is probably the route you will want to go, unless another user already has a driver for this board and LabVIEW available.To get more information on calling dlls and interfacing to external code (particularly C/C code), then I would start by looking at the 'Using External Code in LabVIEW' document. You can find this by opening LabVIEW, going to the Help menu, and clicking on 'Search the LabVIEW Bookshelf.' This will open a pdf document that links to other great resources, one of which is the large 'Using External Code in LabVIEW' document. Glance through this manual and then other information/examples on ni.com/support for some help in getting starting in calling DLLs from within LabVIEW if you have never had experience with this before.Regards,MichaelApplications EngineerNational Instruments.
Imaging Source Ascom Driver
Frame Grabber Cards B. Frame Grabber Cards NIH Imagedirectly supports the ScionLG-3, AG-5 and VG-5 frame grabber cards for acquiring images from video sources,such as TV cameras and VCR's.
Scion Frame Grabber Driver
These cards allow brightness, contrast and pseudocolor tobe adjusted during 'live' capture. They support continuous histogram display and 'live' paste,which can be useful for image alignment.All of the Scion cards support software control of analog gain and offset and on-chipintegration. The LG-3 features a frame buffer that can be expanded to 64MB usingstandard Mac SIMMS. The AG-5 supports video rate averaging and integration. The VG-5is a short NuBus card that will fit in the Quadra 610 and PowerMac 6100.