recalled_sensor
Description
Simulates the look of a malfunctioning digital camera sensor that is defective, failing, or subject to an official recall.
This effect introduces corrupted rows, unstable color channels, dead-pixel clusters, exposure tearing, and chaotic image instability — mimicking catastrophic sensor failure.
Purpose
recalled_sensor is designed for creators who want:
- the aesthetics of a physically damaged or overheating sensor,
- horizontal tearing, line corruption, or rolling-shutter breakage,
- dead-pixel patterns, color-channel misalignment, or gritty digital decay,
- an aggressive technical-failure look appropriate for glitch, horror, sci-fi, or surveillance themes,
- unpredictable, chaotic motion artifacts that cannot be achieved through normal grading.
How It Works
- Simulated Sensor Row Failure
Horizontal lines may break, misalign, repeat, or shift.
- Color-Channel Corruption
Red, green, and blue channels may desynchronize or flicker independently.
- Dead Pixel Noise Injection
Bright or dark pixel speckles mimic sensor element burnouts.
- Rolling-Shutter Breakdown
Temporal distortions produce jittering horizontal bands or broken scanlines.
- Encoding
Output is encoded using global Videobeaux settings for codec, CRF, and pixel format.
Program Template
videobeaux -P recalled_sensor -i input.mp4 -o output.mp4
Arguments
- (No additional program-specific arguments; uses global videobeaux options only.)
Real World Example
videobeaux -P recalled_sensor \
-i myvideo.mp4 \
-o recalled_sensor_styled.mp4
Program Output
Program output video omitted due to size; see repository for reference clips.
Technical Notes
- High-motion scenes produce more dramatic tearing because of simulated rolling-shutter corruption.
- Bright surfaces intensify dead-pixel bloom and channel misalignment.
- Compression interacts strongly with corrupted scanlines — higher CRF will exaggerate the effect.
- Because the distortion emulates hardware malfunction rather than pure software effect, the results may appear chaotic and non-repetitive.
- Works with any resolution but is most convincing at HD or higher due to visible pixel-grid patterns.
Recommended Usage
- Horror, sci-fi, or techno-thriller sequences involving malfunctioning equipment.
- Glitch art and experimental cinema exploring digital decay.
- Surveillance or found-footage aesthetics that require broken-camera realism.
- Transitions where catastrophic failure is used as a visual punctuation.
- Layering beneath
crossmosh or overexposed_stutter for extreme destruction.
Quality Tips
- Lower CRF if you want crisp corrupted lines; higher CRF if you prefer smearing and noise.
- Pair with
bad_contrast for harsher tonal collapse.
- Combine with
lsd_feedback or frame_delay_pro2 to create evolving sensor meltdown effects.
- If the clip is too bright, pre-process with
gamma_fix to avoid overwhelming bloom in the corrupted channels.
- For realistic malfunction aesthetics, leave the effect unchained; for surreal results, chain with other distortive modules.