How to Check If the FOM Value of Your Night Vision Goggles Is Real

When buyers choose night vision goggles, they often see numbers like FOM 1,600, FOM 1,800, FOM 2,000, or even higher. But one question is very common: Is this FOM value real? This is an important question, especially for dealers, wholesalers, and product buyers. A higher FOM value usually means a higher price. If the FOM is not real, the buyer may pay for a high-grade tube but receive a lower-grade product. The good news is that buyers can do some basic checks before and after receiving the device. You may not be able to test the exact FOM value at home, but you can find many warning signs by checking the report, the device, and the image quality. Below is a simple step-by-step guide.

1. Start with the Online Spec Sheet

Before you check the physical device, first ask the supplier for the image intensifier tube spec sheet.

A real FOM value should not be only a single number on a product page. It should be supported by tube data.

A useful spec sheet should usually include:

What to Check

Why It Matters

Tube serial number

Shows which tube the report belongs to

SNR

One of the key numbers used to calculate FOM

Center resolution

Usually shown as lp/mm

FOM

Should match SNR × resolution

EBI

Helps show low-light background performance

Halo

Helps show light bloom around bright points

Gain

Shows how much the tube amplifies light

Test date or batch info

Helps track the tube data

FOM is normally calculated by multiplying SNR × center resolution. For example, if a tube has SNR 25 and center resolution 64 lp/mm, the FOM is 1,600. This calculation method is commonly used in night vision specification guides.

So, if a seller only says “high FOM” but cannot show SNR and resolution, the number is hard to check.

2. Recalculate the FOM Number Yourself

After you receive the spec sheet, do not only look at the FOM number. Check whether the number makes sense.

Use this simple formula:

FOM = SNR × Center Resolution

Here are some examples:

SNR

Center Resolution

Calculated FOM

Result

25

64 lp/mm

1,600

Reasonable

28

64 lp/mm

1,792

Close to FOM 1,800

30

72 lp/mm

2,160

Close to FOM 2,200

32

72 lp/mm

2,304

High-performance level

Now compare this with what the seller claims.

For example:

Seller Claims

Spec Sheet Shows

Real Calculation

Buyer Should Think

FOM 2,000

SNR 25 × 64 lp/mm

1,600

Not matching

FOM 1,800

SNR 28 × 64 lp/mm

1,792

Reasonable

FOM 2,200

SNR 30 × 72 lp/mm

2,160

Close

FOM 2,400

No SNR, no resolution

Cannot check

Ask for full data

A small difference may happen because of rounding. But if the claimed FOM is much higher than the calculated number, buyers should ask the supplier to explain.

3. Check If the Report Looks Fake or Reused

A spec sheet is useful, but buyers should also check whether the report looks reliable.

Some reports may look professional, but they may not match the actual tube. This is why buyers should check the details carefully.

Here are some red flags:

Red Flag

Possible Problem

No tube serial number

The report may not belong to the real tube

Blurry photo of the report

Key data may be hidden

Only FOM is shown

SNR and resolution cannot be checked

FOM does not match SNR × resolution

The value may be wrong or overstated

Same report used for many devices

The report may be reused

Left and right tubes share one number

Not enough data for binocular goggles

Seller refuses to provide full report

Higher risk for buyers

For binocular night vision goggles, such as PVS-31, buyers should be more careful. A binocular device has two tubes. The left tube and right tube may have different SNR, resolution, EBI, halo, and FOM values.

So the buyer should ask:

Can you show the left tube data and right tube data separately?

If the seller only gives one general FOM number for the whole device, it is not enough for serious B2B buying.

4. Match the Spec Sheet with the Physical Device

After you receive the night vision goggles, check whether the spec sheet really belongs to the device.

This step is very important.

Check these points:

Physical Check

What to Compare

Tube serial number

Must match the spec sheet

Device label

Should match the product model or QC card

Package information

Should not conflict with the report

Left tube and right tube

Should match their own data

Phosphor type

White phosphor or green phosphor should match the order

FOM range

Should match the confirmed purchase grade

For example, if you ordered a PVS-31 with two tubes around FOM 1,800, the supplier should be able to show the data for both tubes.

A simple format may look like this:

Tube Position

Serial Number

SNR

Resolution

FOM

Left Tube

28

64 lp/mm

1,792

Right Tube

27.8

64 lp/mm

1,779

If the serial numbers on the report and the device do not match, the buyer should ask for a clear explanation.

5. Do a Basic Visual Check, But Do Not Treat It as a FOM Test

Many buyers try to judge FOM by looking through the night vision goggles.

This is useful, but it has limits.

You can use your eyes to find obvious problems, but you cannot accurately measure FOM only by looking through the device.

When checking the image, look for these points:

What to Check

What It May Show

Image noise

Lower SNR may show more noise in dark scenes

Sharpness

Helps roughly judge clarity

Black spots

Shows tube blemishes or defects

Halo around lights

Helps check bright-point performance

Edge clarity

Shows optical and tube image quality

Brightness uniformity

Shows whether the image is even

Left-right difference

Important for binocular devices

However, visual checks cannot prove that a device is exactly FOM 1,800, 2,000, or 2,200.

A phone video is also not enough. Phone cameras change exposure, brightness, color, and contrast automatically. So a good-looking video does not prove the real FOM value.

Use visual checks to find problems, not to replace real testing.

6. Use a Resolution Chart for a Simple Offline Check

A resolution chart can help buyers do a simple image clarity check.

For example, buyers can use a line-pair chart or a USAF-style resolution chart to compare sharpness. This can help show whether the device looks close to the claimed resolution level.

But it still cannot fully verify FOM.

Why?

Because FOM is not only about resolution. It also depends on SNR.

A tube with high resolution but lower SNR may still look noisy in very dark conditions. A tube with a balanced SNR and resolution may give a more comfortable image.

Some night vision buyer guides also remind users that different specs affect the final image in different ways, so buyers should not only focus on one number.

A simple resolution check can include:

Step

How to Do It

1

Place the chart at a fixed distance

2

Use the same light condition each time

3

Focus the goggles carefully

4

Check the center image first

5

Compare left and right tubes separately

6

Take notes or photos only as reference

This test is useful for comparison, but it is not a full FOM test.

7. Use Professional Test Equipment for Accurate Verification

If buyers need accurate FOM verification, professional test equipment is required.

This is especially important for:

Buyer Type

Why Testing Matters

Wholesalers

To avoid batch quality problems

Distributors

To protect their own brand reputation

Night vision brands

To match product grades correctly

Procurement teams

To confirm product value before repeat orders

Repair or assembly companies

To check tubes before installation

Professional night vision test systems can test items such as image quality, resolution, gain, EBI, and other tube performance data. Hoffman Engineering, for example, describes image tube test systems and photometric test systems for checking image intensifier tube performance.

For large orders, buyers can ask the supplier:

Question

Why Ask It

Can you provide tube spec sheets before shipment?

To check data before delivery

Can you match tube serial numbers with reports?

To avoid report mismatch

Can you support sample inspection?

To reduce purchase risk

Can you provide left and right tube data for binocular goggles?

To check tube matching

Can you support third-party testing if needed?

To increase trust

Can you provide different FOM ranges?

To match different market levels

Professional testing is the best way to confirm the true FOM value. For normal buyers, spec sheet checking and serial number matching are the most practical first steps.

8. Simple Buyer Checklist

Before placing an order or accepting delivery, buyers can use this checklist:

Step

What to Check

Pass or Not

1

Ask for the tube spec sheet

Pass / Not pass

2

Check SNR and resolution

Pass / Not pass

3

Recalculate FOM

Pass / Not pass

4

Check tube serial number

Pass / Not pass

5

Match report with physical tube/device

Pass / Not pass

6

Check left and right tube data for binocular goggles

Pass / Not pass

7

Inspect image quality

Pass / Not pass

8

Use a resolution chart for simple clarity check

Pass / Not pass

9

Use professional equipment for accurate verification

Pass / Not pass

If several items fail, the buyer should not ignore them. Ask the supplier for more details before making a larger order.

9. Red Flags of Fake or Unreliable FOM Claims

Here are the most common warning signs:

Red Flag

What It Means

“FOM 2000+” with no report

The claim cannot be checked

No SNR or resolution

FOM cannot be recalculated

No tube serial number

The report may not match the tube

Same FOM for every unit

Real tubes usually have small differences

Report photo is unclear

Important data may be hidden

Left and right tubes are not listed separately

Not enough proof for binocular goggles

Seller only provides phone videos

Videos cannot prove FOM

Seller avoids technical questions

Higher purchase risk

FOM calculation does not match

The value may be wrong

A reliable supplier should be willing to explain the data clearly. If the supplier cannot explain where the FOM number comes from, buyers should be careful.

10. What Buyers Should Remember

Checking FOM is not difficult, but buyers should follow the right order.

Do not start with a phone video.
Do not trust only a product page.
Do not only look at one big FOM number.

A better process is:

  1. Check the spec sheet first.
  2. Recalculate FOM from SNR and resolution.
  3. Check whether the report looks complete and logical.
  4. Match the tube serial number with the real device.
  5. Inspect the image quality after receiving the product.
  6. Use professional test equipment if accurate verification is needed.

For B2B buyers, this process can reduce risk before bulk orders.

Conclusion

A real FOM value should be supported by real tube data. Buyers should check the spec sheet, confirm SNR and resolution, recalculate the FOM, match the tube serial number, and inspect the actual device.

Visual checking is useful, but it cannot replace professional testing. If the order is large or the product grade is high, professional test equipment or third-party inspection is the safest way to verify the real performance.

For distributors, wholesalers, and night vision device brands, choosing a supplier that can explain tube grades clearly is very important.

At QCNV, we can support PVS-31 binocular night vision goggles, PVS-14 night vision monoculars, and GEN2+ / GEN3 image intensifier tubes with different FOM ranges for bulk purchase and product customization.

If you are sourcing night vision products, you can send us your target FOM range, phosphor type, product model, and order quantity. Our team can help you choose a suitable configuration for your market.

FAQ

Can I check the exact FOM value at home?

Not exactly. You can check the report, serial number, image quality, and resolution trend. But accurate FOM testing needs measured SNR and resolution under controlled conditions.

Can a phone video prove the FOM value?

No. A phone video can only show a rough image effect. Phone cameras change exposure and brightness automatically, so the video cannot prove the real FOM value.

What should I ask the supplier before buying?

Ask for the tube spec sheet, SNR, center resolution, FOM, tube serial number, phosphor type, and left/right tube data if you are buying binocular night vision goggles.

Is higher FOM always better?

Higher FOM is usually a good sign, but it is not the only thing to check. Buyers should also look at SNR, resolution, EBI, halo, gain, tube defects, and image uniformity.

Why do two tubes with the same FOM look different?

Because FOM is only one number. Two tubes may have the same FOM but different SNR, resolution, EBI, halo, gain, and image cleanliness.

What is the safest way to verify FOM for bulk orders?

For bulk orders, buyers should check spec sheets, match serial numbers, inspect samples, and use professional test equipment or third-party testing when needed.

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