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#11
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I've been successful in using a tripod in my Warrior. I just filmed
some night ops two nights ago successfully. What I do is set up the tripod to have two shortened legs and one long leg. I put the two shorter legs against the back seat's bend and adjust the long leg to the floor to get a somewhat level position. I secure the back two with the lap belt and use a bungee to secure the front attaching it to a bar under one of the front seats. Unless you're doing aerobatics, it will stay put. Actually, it should stay put even in aerobatics given a tight enough bungee/seatbelt setup. I've had no problems with the focus using a common Sony DCR-TRV18 MiniDV camcorder. I find that I don't have to put it on the Focus on Infinity setting to get both the panel and outside in focus but you can try it if you think it will help. A couple of things I learned through trial and error: 1) put the camera as close to the headliner as possible to get a good view of the outside. Anything lower will get you a frame full of panel. 2) unless you want to listen to the engine drone, I'd suggest plugging the back headphone jack into the audio-in jack. Just make sure to get a good sound level through adjustment of the passenger volume in the intercom (if you can). Otherwise you can easily end up with distorted audio (although it does give it an "antique" flavor...or maybe a New York City Subway announcement flavor--it's a fine line) I'm sure there is the "proper" way according to audio/video philes but this worked for me. Marco wrote: So I've decided to film some of my flights now during the rainy season (really fun flying in Hawai'i during that time), and I was wondering if anyone has any advice on how to strap a camera on or not on a tripod into a plane, preferable on the tripod so I can move it around as I desire (pan it left to right). Thanks for your guys help. |
#12
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This guy has a good set up. He even has a video that explains what he
does. http://www.160knots.com/making_video.htm wrote: So I've decided to film some of my flights now during the rainy season (really fun flying in Hawai'i during that time), and I was wondering if anyone has any advice on how to strap a camera on or not on a tripod into a plane, preferable on the tripod so I can move it around as I desire (pan it left to right). Thanks for your guys help. |
#13
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On 2006-11-28, Marco Leon wrote:
I'm sure there is the "proper" way according to audio/video philes but this worked for me. The 'proper' way would be an impedance matching transformer. However, I found (since the input of my camcorder would give distorted audio off the intercom regardless of the intercom's volume level) a fairly high value resistor - IIRC, something on the order of 470k, but I may be remembering wrong - attenuated the signal enough that it didn't distort (and it sounded pretty good on the recording). -- Yes, the Reply-To email address is valid. Oolite-Linux: an Elite tribute: http://oolite-linux.berlios.de |
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