Record 483,300 Frames Per Second With the Phantom T2110 High-Speed Camera

A unique camera with stunning high-speed capabilities.

Jourdan Aldredge • Feb 19, 2025

If Phantom cameras are known for one thing, it’s recording video at blistering speeds. And, believe it or not, that’s certainly the case with the latest announcement of a new Phantom T2110 high-speed camera.

The Phantom T2110 features a custom 12-bit one-megapixel backside-illuminated image sensor which is, truthfully, designed for more scientific applications and studying motions, combustions, ballistics, etc… rather than your standard cinematography needs.

However, while the camera can shoot at a staggering 483,330 frames per second, the camera can only reach that number by decreasing the resolution to 640x64 pixels.

Still, it’s an interesting camera that does a very neat trick, so who knows—maybe it might be right for a fun project or two. Let’s take a look at the new Phantom T2110 and its high-speed capabilities.

The Phantom T2110

As mentioned above, the Phantom T2110 features a unique 12-bit one-megapixel backside-illuminated image sensor that can capture video at over 21,000 fps at its full one-megapixel resolution. But, if you’re a scientist or insane filmmaker looking for more speed than that, the T2110 can ramp up to 483,330 fps at 640x64 pixels.

The camera’s sensor has an image throughput of 21 gigapixels per second (Gpx/s), which should help with low-light performance as well. The sensor can also shoot in color, monochrome, and ultraviolet-extended modes.

For those actually looking to use the Phantom T2110 for scientific research, there is also quite a bit of customization available to users to select a pixel-binned mode to help with quantum efficiency. Nerdy stuff that won’t apply to many filmmaking applications to be truthful.

Price and Availability

While we don’t know the ultimate pricing for the Phantom T2110 just yet, we do know that the camera is set to come with different RAM options ranging from 32GB to 256GB with up to 63 memory partitions. The camera will use CineMag 5 for storage and will be able to record up to eight seconds at its maximum frame rate when equipped with its maximum internal memory.

The camera will support recording in Cine RAW and Cine Compress, Apple ProRes, H.264 MP4, and a few more options, plus will be able to capture still images in your standard JPEG, TIFF, RAW, and DNG, along with some other specialized scientific image formats.

The Phantom T2110 will come standard with a Nikon F-mount, but will also support Canon EF, PL, C, and other mount options.