Optical Sensors

Distance measurement sensors — laser, ultrasonic, radar, and capacitive technologies for any range.

Slot-type photoelectric U-sensors for small-object detection and position sensing — new and obsolete in stock.

Optical Sensors

40 Products
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Banner LTF12IC2LDQ Laser Sensor

Banner LTF12IC2LDQ Laser Sensor

MFR #: LTF12IC2LDQ
$636.65/ea ✓ Available
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Banner LTF12KC2LDQ Laser Sensors
$636.65/ea ✓ Available
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Banner LTF12UC2LDQ Laser Sensor

Banner LTF12UC2LDQ Laser Sensor

MFR #: LTF12UC2LDQ
$636.65/ea ✓ Available
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Banner LTF24IC2LD Laser Sensor

Banner LTF24IC2LD Laser Sensor

MFR #: LTF24IC2LD
$894.20/ea ✓ Available
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Banner LTF24IC2LDQ Laser Sensor

Banner LTF24IC2LDQ Laser Sensor

MFR #: LTF24IC2LDQ
$894.20/ea ✓ Available
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Banner LTF24KC2LDQ Laser Sensor

Banner LTF24KC2LDQ Laser Sensor

MFR #: LTF24KC2LDQ
$894.20/ea ✓ Available
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Banner PBAT26UTA-VL Fiber Optics

Banner PBAT26UTA-VL Fiber Optics

MFR #: PBAT26UTA-VL
$60.35/ea ✓ Available
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Banner Q4XFKLAF610-Q8 Photoelectric Sensors
$481.10/ea ✓ Available
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Banner Q4XTBLAF100-Q8 Photoelectric Sensors
$386.75/ea ✓ Available
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Banner Q4XTBLAF300-Q8 Photoelectric Sensors
$386.75/ea ✓ Available
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Banner Q4XTBLAF500-Q8 Photoelectric Sensors
$458.15/ea ✓ Available
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Banner Q4XTILAF300-Q8 Photoelectric Sensors
$510.00/ea ✓ Available
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Banner Q4XTKLAF300-Q8 Photoelectric Sensors
$423.30/ea ✓ Available
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Banner Q4XTKLAF600-Q8 Photoelectric Sensors
$481.10/ea ✓ Available
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Banner Q4XTULAF300-Q8 Photoelectric Sensors
$510.00/ea ✓ Available
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Banner Q4XTULAF500-Q8 Photoelectric Sensors
$556.75/ea ✓ Available
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Choosing Optical Sensors components

Optical sensor selection comes down to detection mode (which light path the system uses), the target characteristics, the operating range, and the environmental conditions. The wrong mode for the target — diffuse on a dark fabric, retro-reflective on a clear bottle — gives intermittent or no detection.

Specs to confirm before ordering:

  • Detection technology: photoelectric (diffuse, retro-reflective, through-beam, background-suppression), fiber optic (amplifier + remote head), laser, color, contrast/mark, luminescence
  • Operating range and depth of field
  • Light source: red LED (general), infrared (covert detection), laser (small precise target), white LED (color discrimination)
  • Output: PNP/NPN, NO/NC, light-on/dark-on, analog, IO-Link
  • Supply voltage and current draw
  • Housing style: M-thread barrel, rectangular block, fiber amplifier + fiber head
  • IP rating — IP67 typical, IP69K for washdown
  • Response time — fast response for high-speed inspection
  • Teach method: pushbutton, external teach wire, IO-Link configuration

Common gotchas: ambient light affects optical sensor reliability — direct sunlight on a diffuse sensor swamps the receiver, and overhead fluorescent flicker can cause false triggers. Background-suppression (BGS) variants of diffuse sensors solve the "what is the target vs. what is behind it" problem by detecting only within a fixed distance window. Shiny and transparent targets defeat ordinary diffuse and retro sensors; polarized retro-reflective or through-beam handles these reliably. Color and contrast sensors need a stable reference taught at install; lighting changes affect the teach and may require re-teaching after seasonal sun changes.

Typical applications: part-present detection on conveyors, label-present check before downstream printing, color check on caps, fiber-based detection in tight machine areas, laser-based detection of small parts, and inspection of transparent or shiny products. For legacy machines, in-kind optical sensor replacement preserves the mounting position and the controller's expected output behavior.

For obsolete optical sensors, send the OEM part number for a sourcing quote.

Do you stock obsolete optical sensors across all types?
Yes. Discontinued Banner Q-Series first generations, retired Sick W codes, end-of-life Omron E3Z, and earlier Keyence PZ-series are sourced through our supplier network.
Why does my diffuse sensor work intermittently?
Common causes: ambient light interference, target reflectivity variation (matte vs. glossy), target color (dark surfaces reflect less), background reflection from a wall behind the target. Try a background-suppression variant or switch to retro-reflective/through-beam.
Color sensor vs. photoelectric — when do I need color?
Color sensors when the discriminator is color (sorting red vs. green caps), not just presence. Photoelectric for any/no part. Contrast/mark sensors for color difference relative to a background (printed marks on cardboard).
Will the sensor work outdoors?
Indoor-rated sensors often fail in direct sunlight from saturated receivers and weather. Outdoor-rated variants (specific extended range, UV-resistant housings) are available for some product families. Verify the rating before installing outdoors.
How fast can optical sensors respond?
Modern sensors achieve response times from 50 µs (laser, fast fiber amplifier) to several ms (high-resolution diffuse). For high-speed conveyors, match the response time to the part dwell in the beam.
What is the warranty?
12-month functional warranty. Damage to optical lenses from scratching, harsh cleaning, or impact is not covered.
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