









🚀 Elevate your streaming and face recognition game with next-level 3D clarity!
The MMlove USB Stereo Camera is a professional-grade 1080P 60FPS dual-lens 3D webcam featuring a 115° wide-angle view. Designed for seamless plug-and-play use across multiple platforms, it excels in VR, face recognition, streaming, and industrial imaging applications, delivering crisp, distortion-free visuals with synchronized dual HD lenses.


| Brand Name | MMlove |
| Item Weight | 2.82 ounces |
| Package Dimensions | 4.33 x 2.76 x 1.97 inches |
| Item model number | USB3D1080P02-H110 |
| Special Features | 1080P 60FPS High Speed Camera Module, 115° Wide Angle View, Dual Lens 3D Stereo USB Camera |
C**E
Nice 16MP camera
Installed into Windows 11 easily. Very nice resolution. Bought this for use with Lightburn on my Laser. 170° is TOO wide and gave Lightburn fits. After fooling with calibration in Lightburn a couple hours, I got it to calibrate and it works GREAT. If you need a nice WIDE angle camera this is it! If you want for laser and Lightburn, get one that's less then 150° FOV.
K**C
Easy 3D video capture, but with some quirks
This dual-lens camera is truly plug-and-play — I had it recording 3D video within minutes. Both lenses support 1080p at 60fps, and the video looks crisp when viewed in VR goggles (side-by-side format). Build quality is decent, though the lens caps don’t fit well — they touch the lenses — and the focus appears to be fixed, which makes it less flexible. Also, note this isn’t a 180° immersive camera; it gives you SBS video on a flat screen. Overall, easy to use and great for experimenting with stereo video, but I’ll probably 3D print a case to protect the exposed board.
B**N
An interesting little project camera... video only I guess.
Starting with... I couldn't figure out how to get a 16MP shot out of the camera. I used the recommended software, and I followed the directions and I couldn't get anything larger than a 800x600 photo. It bombs out on 1280x720, 1920x1080 and anything above.Which is a shame because the video is somewhat nice in good lighting. It's not quite the level of my smartphone, but it's definitely better than any of the PCB cameras I've been exposed to.I was thinking of using this to try and retrofit in an old rangefinder film camera, but I'm not entirely sure how that'd shake out without being able to take photos.Maybe it's just the software? But, what are the chances that some code I could write could do a better job than the softer that the manufacturer suggested I use?
R**N
Highly Recommended
The media could not be loaded. IMPORTANT - EDIT: Just watched the uploaded video...definitely looks like some type of compression or downscaling was done by Amazon. It no longer shows my hand quickly and smoothly moving across the screen. In the original video it was fast and the video was smooth. In the uploaded video it almost looks like I'm just casually moving my hand across the view and not doing it with constant fast speed...so bummer about that and all I can do is point it out since it does ruin what I was trying to convey and it is no longer representative of what this is capable of.I see many reviews on this about how it isn't fast or couldn't get the 1080P (especially at 60FPS). I'll tell you straight out, you MUST have a fast computer and a fast USB port, or you absolutely won't get the full capability of this camera. I would've like to have uploaded the 1080P 60FPS video I did, but that very short video was almost 100MB and I'm absolutely sure if I was able to upload it...it would get downscaled in some form.I did, however, do a 600P 60FPS video (which hopefully doesn't get downscaled) for just a short enough time to see my hand go past as quickly as I could move it past...seriously, you'll understand why. I then took the video and played it in very, very slow speed on VLC Media player and then exported a snapshot of my hand. I included the same snapshot from the 600P and from the 1080P. Both appear to have about the same speed capability with no slow down even when using the 1080P.So, before you say...hey, the hand looks a little blurry, that sucks. I'm going to tell you to watch the video and see just how fast I move my hand past (and actually it was kind of close to the camera as well) and then try that with ANY other camera. First and foremost, if you expect to have little to no motion blur you must have a global shutter. And actually if you want to have any descent dual camera setup...both must be global shutter type otherwise you will never, ever be able to do anything good on it (i.e. actual analysis that can use the two images to determine distance of various objects by comparing the two images and looking at the slight difference the object is in each of the pictures).This camera is able to capture my hand that was moving considerably fast and do so with enough clarity that you could easily use AI vision to determine this was a hand and not a blurry stump.What I don't like is the PCB and the mount the PCB provides. I did not subtract a star because the PCB does have holes in the corners that can be used to mount to a 3D printed case very easily. What I would like to see from manufacturers that want to sell 'modules' that are not complete, regardless of the reason, would be for them to provide a simple 3D case for it in addition to a model of the device itself for other to use in modeling their own cases. It is overdue for manufacturers of these types of devices to capitalize on this since it would give someone the ability to easily make a finished product even if it isn't being sold as one. Anyway, it isn't the standard yet so no mark down for that.I would recommend this. But let me tell you...I have a Aorus 17 YE5 Gaming laptop that I tested this on. The basic specs are Intel Core i7-12700H (14 Core, 20 Thread CPU), 32GB DDR5, RTX 3080 (Mobile) and a freakin fast USB port. This laptop eats video streams like candy and rightfully so considered how expensive it is. Hopefully if someone is reading this that is about to do a review and thinks this camera doesn't perform...check your computer specs first to make sure it isn't your computer. Based on my experience I'd say it was...
S**
Great 3D Webcam... Perfect For VR Projects
This MMlove stereo camera is awesome! The 1080P 60fps dual lenses give super clear and smooth video, perfect for streaming and VR projects. Setup was a breeze with the plug-and-play feature, and the wide 115° viewing angle captures everything nicely. It works great on my PC and Raspberry Pi—definitely a solid pick if you want a quality 3D webcam without any hassle!
N**L
Plug and play stereo vision
This dual camera setup is plug and play for most platforms ('3D USB Camera' under Windows) and outputs a 32:9 1080p video at 60 fps. Photos go up to 3840x1080 and 4.1mp.Connectivity is handled via the included usb cable and the interface on the camera is USB-C 2.0. Lens caps protect the sensors and the included manual outlines done programs you can try.Aside from your standard video tools there are a number of open source libraries you can use to integrate this camera into your projects.For the price (you're getting 2 cameras) and video/image quality and responsiveness is fast enough for 3d stereo vision and depth detection.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
1 week ago