

🔬 Elevate your microscope visuals—because your discoveries deserve to be seen!
The Swift 5.0 Megapixel Digital Camera is a compact eyepiece camera designed for compound and stereo microscopes, delivering sharp 5MP color photos and live video via USB 2.0. Compatible with Windows and Mac, it includes powerful imaging software for editing and measurement, making it ideal for educators, clinicians, and hobbyists seeking affordable, high-quality microscope documentation.















| ASIN | B07H47HB2C |
| Best Sellers Rank | #17 in Microscope Accessories (Camera & Photo Products) |
| Customer Reviews | 3.8 3.8 out of 5 stars (172) |
| Date First Available | September 5, 2018 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Weight | 4.9 ounces |
| Item model number | EP5 |
| Manufacturer | SNM |
| Product Dimensions | 1.18 x 1.18 x 2.11 inches |
C**S
Works out of the box on Windows 10.
Works out of the box on Windows 10 with Swift Stereo Zoom microscope. It would cost a lot more for a better setup. It has excellent resolution and accurate color reproduction. My only quibble is that it magnifies, so there is less field of view, and I have to add a reduction lens to the objective. Overall, it works fine for a hobbyist like me.
M**M
It's fine for the intended purpose.
It's.. alright. A bit noisy in the image and colors are somewhat inaccurate but that can be calibrated. Especially with the swift imaging software which is fairly powerful and very useful. I'm dancing around the idea of getting a higher mp version as well. Now i know that one reviewer claims that you will run into diffraction error and this is certainly true... but it's just a bit shy of the resolution you need even without a 400- 1,500 dollar scope tbh. I'd say between 8 and 16 mp would suffice for a more intermediate- pro use. So if you're just having fun with your microscope or on a budget this may be what you're looking for. If you're looking to do lab work with this, it may take some finess and effort to get set up properly and is probably not for you. But those people aren't looking at budget scope cameras anyways. If you expect to see anything clearly under 1.5-3ish micron, then... this is definitely not for you. Overall... decent value, good camera. Hope this helps
R**O
Best option for biginers
Wow now we can record an take pics, also very good quality
P**Z
Software never worked and camera low quality, not recommended for research
The software never worked for me, even though I successfully connected the camera to the computer. I had to use QuickTime Player. Also, I tried to use camera to do research. Exactly to count pollen grains marked with quantum dots. However, the camera is not powerful enough. It has very poor resolution. I don't recommend it for doing research or doing any kind of image analysis.
S**N
I've ordered 5 and they all work fine
I have five of these and they all work fine right out of the box. I haven't had any trouble getting the "EasyView" software working on any computer. The software - true to name - is definitely easy to use. I got the first of these cameras about 7 months ago so I don't know how long they will last, but for now they all work fairly well. They work perfectly for what they are designed for: allowing entry-level microscopists to acquire digital photos of things like cheek cells, plant cells, aquatic microorganisms, pollen, etc. If you're trying to quantify the membrane invaginations in mitochondria during oxidative stress, this camera (and the microscopes it would work with) is obviously not for you. It's worth noting that, if you're putting one of these on a $100 - $500 microscope and looking at samples with 2000x magnification, the limiting factor in your picture quality will almost certainly be in the lenses of your microscope and not in the quality of the image aquired by the camera. You can do a rough back-of-the-envelope calculation to prove to yourself that you are losing details due to the diffraction limitations of light and not insufficient pixels in the camera. You will not be able to clearly see sub-micron features in a cell with this camera. In the representative pictures that I posted, it should be noted that the ciliate was travelling quite quickly relative to the field of view, hence the lack of absolute clarity in the picture. The hibiscus pollen is fairly large relative to the depth of view, so obviously I was not able to get the entire sample in-focus. The latter problem could have been overcome by aquiring multiple images in different focal planes and making a focal stack (something worth trying if you have a hard time getting your samples in-focus). Again, I've bought 5 of these cameras and they all work great. Zero problems right out of the box. Limitations to the resolution are much more likely to be due to the quality of your microscope or your sample preparation and not due to insufficiencies with the camera itself. Basically: you are getting exactly what you buy!
D**A
Not clear image
It was easy to install, and functional. Not very clear image though. I wish it were like looking through the lens. It’s very hard to get a good focus. It needs an auto focus feature to adjust itself once locked into image.
H**T
High-Resolution Camera and Super Easy to Install
This fits perfectly into my Swift SW380T microscope. Drop it into the top prism tubing, connect the cable to it and your computer, load the software on disk, and you will get great high-resolution pictures on your computer screen to snap a picture from. Had to wait almost a month to get it, so I assumed it came from China, but it was well worth the wait......I love it!
G**G
Works fine but cumbersome with Mac OSX
The camera works well with crisp images, although as others mentioned the refresh rate is frustratingly slow. For promised and included Mac OSX, note that the software comes on a 3-inch CD which is nearly impossible to access from a mac and it is apparently not available anywhere I could find for download. I did find that I can use the camera through Quick Time Player and the QuickCamera app, and then capture photos as screen shots. This works, but lacks the expected image control abilities. It is quite effective to display live images on an attached computer displayed through one of those Apps for several people to view at once.
B**B
This camera works well for basic microscopy imaging. The included software (Swift view, which is repackaged ImageView software) is easy to operate and has many useful features in it. You can control exposure and other camera settings, allowing more control over the captured image than previous ocular cameras I've owned. The small size makes this easy to add to a microscope setup without adding bulk to the system. As the CMOS chip is placed close to where the ocular lens is focused, the microscope remains fairly parfocal when you change lenses - a big improvement over my old ocular lens where the camera is positioned well behind that focal point, meaning that changing lenses also required significant refocusing of the camera. For the price, this is a great camera.
T**A
Muito bom!
C**D
Looks like camera is probably fine for a quick and basic microscope camera - which is what I was looking for, not needing or expecting high optical performance. Shipping was fast. Spent over 2 hours trying to get it to work on 2 different Windows 10 PCs. Supplied software cannot find the camera after installation... and rebooting PCs and uninstall/install, checking for updates etc.. After looking at system hardware and driver settings I could see it recognised as a USB audio webcam device at one point. I had had enough at that point and did not want to waste more time poking around with registry settings etc. to find out what was wrong, so returned it for full refund, no problem. Appears software is quite old and must have incompatibilities with current windows 10 and seems it is not maintained to stay compatible.
A**R
Like to see objects on laptop.
O**C
VIDEO WILL BE YELLOWISH TINTED. NOT GOOD FOR ANY SERIOUS LAB USE. REFRESH RATE IS ALSO VERY LOW, DON'T WASTE YOUR TIME ON IT.
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