OtherNot currently available (may be discontinued)
Blueye Pro
by RobotLAB · $19,990
Specifications
- Width
- 257 mm
- Height
- 354 mm
- Length
- 485 mm
- Weight
- 8.6 kg
- Max depth m
- 305
- Max depth ft
- 1000
- Lighting c r i
- 90
- Tether gauge
- 28 AWG
- Camera sensor
- 1/2.8 inch Exmor R CMOS
- Tether length m
- 300
- Battery voltage
- 14.8
- Lighting lumens
- 3300
- Thrusters (count)
- 4
- Thrusters watts
- 350
- Battery energy (wh)
- 96.2
- Video resolution
- Full HD 1080p (1920 x 1080)
- Onboard storage g b
- 64
- Camera tilt degrees
- -30 to +30
- Ingress protection
- IPX8
- Lighting color temp
- 5000 K
- Max forward speed (ms)
- 1.5
- Video frame rate fps
- 25/30
- Battery capacity
- 6500 mAh
- Field of view degrees
- 115
- Navigation features
- Assisted navigation with compass, 3-axis IMU
- Operating time hours
- 2
- Max forward speed knots
- 3
- Construction materials
- ABS and aluminum pressure housings, polycarbonate windows
- Tether breaking strength (kg)
- 100
- Operating current tolerance
- 2 knots
Overview
Professional underwater remotely operated vehicle (ROV) rated to 305 m, featuring a tilting Full HD 1080p camera with 3,300-lumen lighting. Designed for single-operator deployment from shore, dock, or small boat. Weighs 8.6 kg with four 350 W thrusters and approximately 2 hours battery runtime. Used for infrastructure inspection, ship hulls, research, and emergency response.
Key features
- ▸Professional inspection-class underwater ROV rated to 305 m (1,000 ft)
- ▸Tilting Full HD 1080p camera with mechanical -30 to +30 degree tilt for flexible viewing angles
- ▸Single-operator deployable at 8.6 kg (under 9 kg) — no crane or dive team required
- ▸3,300-lumen LED lighting with 90 CRI for accurate color documentation underwater
- ▸Four 350 W thrusters deliver 1.5 m/s speed and hold position in up to 2-knot current
- ▸Approximately 2 hours operating time on standard 96.2 Wh battery
- ▸Tether up to 300 m with assisted navigation and 3-axis IMU for precise control
- ▸Suitable for dams, hulls, ports, bridges, research, and emergency response
