On Oct 19, 9:19 pm, Frank Whiteley wrote:
On Oct 19, 5:48 pm, "Ken Kochanski (KK)"
wrote:
On Oct 19, 6:36 pm, Airjunkie wrote:
On Oct 17, 8:43?pm, Randy wrote:
I am looking for suggestions on what type of video equipment to use
to
record some soaring flights. I would also like to know to safely mount
the
cameras, (both inside and outside the cockpit).
Thanks for your time!
Randy
best format - Mini DV. I've zip tied a lipstick camera to my
sunglasses with good results. Also find a clamp type mount to mount
lipstick camera to tubing behind pilot for over shoulder shots, down
the wing shots. Duct tape lipstick camera to exterior of glider -
check for proximity of tattle tales first. Video security web sites
have a variety of lipstick cams to choose from. Most do need 12v
power, either from glider or separate pack. Use Mini DV camcorder as
VCR and away you go. I tuck my camcorder under my right elbow. The
more camera angles the better. So do the same flight over and over
with camera in different place each time. Makes it look like you have
a camera crew. Don't forget air to air shots and ground to air shots
too.... Oh, don't screw up while cameras are running!
Joe Bozo
there's a ton of mini-dvs out there ... any recommendations ... do
all mini-dvs allow you to hook up a lipstick cam?
thanks,
KK
No, look for those with AVI input. I have a JVC GR-DF550 I bought
specifically for that feature though it's a couple of years old now.
Also, for general use 1.33MP CCD. Many out there have 680K CCD. Get
highest res lipstick cam also. AVI lipstick cam and mic will require
external power and they are recorded in dubbing mode.
Frank Whiteley
Thanks, Frank ...
I also found a site that seems to identify all camcorder models that
have AV Inputs ... I guess all of these will support an external
lipstick cam ... don't know enough about the hardware to understand if
there are any other factors that would result in problems.
http://www.vio-pov.com/support/index...acture r=Sony