Optical Gate remote shutter release
fjcvisual
Registered Users Posts: 201 Major grins
Hi everyone, Looking for insights into this area from you all. I think this approach is mostly taken from high speed photography, but this is not a 'high speed' scenario, but it is in motion.
Essentially, I am looking for an optical gate (not sure if this is what they are really called) that will remotely release my shutter. The gate needs to be about 15 feet wide. From there I plan to have pocket wizards remotely trigger the strobes.
Wireless would be nice, but not mandatory. All speedlights, gate and camera will be withing a 30 foot radius. The specific piece I am looking for is the optical gate it self assuming it also includes the wired or wireless communications back to the camera.
any insight would be greatly appreciated.
thanks Jim
Essentially, I am looking for an optical gate (not sure if this is what they are really called) that will remotely release my shutter. The gate needs to be about 15 feet wide. From there I plan to have pocket wizards remotely trigger the strobes.
Wireless would be nice, but not mandatory. All speedlights, gate and camera will be withing a 30 foot radius. The specific piece I am looking for is the optical gate it self assuming it also includes the wired or wireless communications back to the camera.
any insight would be greatly appreciated.
thanks Jim
0
Comments
Any sensible answer would depend upon much more than you have been willing to share. For instance:
Lots more questions. It would be helpful if you could give a very detailed description of the situation and problem that needs this system.
Moderator of the Cameras and Accessories forums
Essentially, think of a 15'x15' vertical plane that when broken will trigger the camera, which in turn will trigger the remote flashes (via pocket wizards). The object will be large like the size of a small car and moving at about 5-8 miles per hour. I want the image to be low key so the background will be blacked out. Only the subject and a frame around the subject will be lit. I will want to freeze the subject.
Am wondering how 'deep' the object is and whether some sort of (adjustable) delay is needed / required?
ie at what stage of the object moving thro' the 'gate' will the photo actually be taken ... or are you considering taking a series of shots, so's you can select the most suitable?
Will the object be aware it's having its pic taken?
pp
Flickr
i am not expecting to need a delay, although that flexibility may be nice. I would want to have the photo taken just as the subject broke the plane. The subject would be about 8-10 feet deep, but I would only want the front 3-4 feet lit.
Yes, the subject will know the picture is being taken.
ie what's the cross-sectional area / shape of the most likely first (front?) bit of the object to pass thro' the gate and where abouts within the 15ft square area this might occur?
This info would be less relevant if you were considering a scanning or multiple reflection array type of system, but if - for instance, you knew that the first part (3ft dia) thro' the beam was likely to be 5ft off the ground, +/- a couple of feet ...then a couple of beams would cover all possibilities, likely to be cheaper and almost certainly easier to setup (imo).
I've never used gear like this for photographic purposes, but I have for other (simpler) counting / object present ones, using IR devices.
Of the 2 types I had available, I found that those that incorporated both transmit and receive heads - in the same unit - were easier to set up, since power was only needed at one end of the beam - a reflector being at the other.
If, however you're talking about an object, 6in in dia (say) that can cross thro' the 225 sqft frame at any point, that's a somewhat different proposition.
Do you have any idea of what total delay between object sensing and pic actually being taken is ... ie shutter + other lags, related to speed and dof considerations.
eg if it was 100ms, then 9 > 12in (approx) of object would have passed thro' the frame before pic was taken.
Any idea about lens focal length, distance of cam from frame ... and will gear be safe
As ziggy says - lots of ???
pp
Flickr
http://www.pocketwizard.com/
I suggest that you should expect this project to run in the small thousands USD for the size portal (15ft square) that you have indicated and considering your total need as presented.
Here is one source for the light curtains themselves. Feel free to contact them for pricing and suitability.
http://www.bannerengineering.com/en-US/products/6/Machine-Safety/45/Safety-Light-Screens-Type-4
http://www.bannerengineering.com/en-US/about/contact-us
You may also wish to consider other "field" type sensors, such as ferro-magnetic if appropriate.
For the absolute cheapest trigger circuits (circuits which would interface with a detector to create an electrical pulse compatible with a PocketWizard transmitter), look at:
http://hiviz.com/tools/triggers/triggers3.htm
These folks are about as reasonable as it gets, since they are marketing towards hobbyist photographers. They probably don't have anything perfectly suited to your application, but I suspect that information you collect from PocketWizard plus these folks could guide you towards a solution.
Moderator of the Cameras and Accessories forums
http://michaelnicknichols.com/nickstake/How-do-camera-traps-work.html
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/explorers/projects/bioblitz/bioblitz-capturing-tigers/
Moderator of the Cameras and Accessories forums
Jim
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