Camera connect with a 433 mhz Transmitter

Can I connect a camera with a 433 mhz Transmitter and when yes how?

and can I use it as real time monitoring?

What sort of camera?
Do you mean you want to remotely trigger a DSLR or something like that?

You mean a video camera? The answer is a clear "no". The data rate of a 433MHz radio is thousands of times too slow.

what can i use instead?

You can buy many different kinds of wireless camera off the shelf. What do you need it for?

i mean with the arduino a camera transmitten what for a transmitter can i use

wifi

You never told us what camera or Arduino you have...

TTL Serial JPEG Camera VC0706

Please reply to all the requests that people make, or they will lose patience and ignore you. Please also read the forum guidelines to learn about what information you should post, in order to get the best answers. We shouldn't have to research things you post, you need to post links or specs here.

I asked you, which Arduino.

And how far do you want to transmit the 'video' ?

It saves a lot of time, and a lot of questions, if you take a minute or two to describe the actual project, what you want to do and why etc.

I have a drone with a arduino and i want to make a camera on the drone to look where the drone flys

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maby so 2 or 3 kilometres

Post on the drone forums, where they discuss those things.

but i want to do that with a arduino.

The drone folks know how it is done.

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The camera you listed is NOT a video camera. It is a still, single frame camera with a minimum serial baud rate of TTL interface. Default baud rate: 115200bps".
You will first have to use an Arduino with a spare serial port that supports that speed. The data is compressed JPEG format. If you care to, you can compute that picture size based on the size of pixels times the number of pixels per picture. A transmitter for 433 mHz uses a 32 byte message size. So have many messages will be necessary to transmit a single picture? You will easily exceed the maximum legal transmission duration time.

You might want to, but so far no-one has managed to achieve that, even if it was legal.

Do you think there might be good reasons for that ?

It is possible to transfer single images, over those distances, but its going to take seconds for each image.

Most "FPV" (First-person Video) drones use a completely separate radio channel for video. For example, 2.4 GHz radios for remote control and a 5.8 GHz transmitter for video.

Here is a camera with a transmitter for $16.56:

You will also need a matching receiver and some kind of video monitor.

Second request, which one?