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Sound trigger
Posted:
Wed May 11, 2005 11:54 am
by rokkstar
Hi guys,
I've don a search on this and its not there or I've missed it.
Does anyone have any experience wuith creating a sound trigger for the D70? Is it possible? More to the point , is it affordable?
Cheers
Matt
Posted:
Wed May 11, 2005 12:03 pm
by Nnnnsic
Hmm... me thinks you'd have to make your own device with this and it would have to be done on the D70s with the cable trigger... the D70 is only capable of an IR trigger.
One of Nikon's Coolpix cameras in the 4mp range has this ability, I know that.
Why do you want it?
Posted:
Wed May 11, 2005 12:06 pm
by rokkstar
Damm.
It was for a project i was thinking of doing, whereby a sound would trigger the release.
Posted:
Wed May 11, 2005 12:06 pm
by sirhc55
I have posted this thread a couple of times. The Time Machine can be used with a sound trigger.
http://www.bmumford.com/photo/camaccess.html
Posted:
Wed May 11, 2005 12:31 pm
by Gordon
I built myself a sound trigger many years ago, also a breaking light beam trigger and a pressure pad trigger. I could use them all with the FE2s, but havent yet worked out how I can use them on the D70 easily. I guess I could buy a solenoid and use the trigger to activate it, the solenoid would have to be arranged to press the IR remote button, which would have to be pointing at the right part of the D70... all a bit much hassle really.
Of course, it would be much simpler if I could hack into the IR remote and use my triggers to close the contacts that the button operates... a project for the future.
cheers, Gordon
Gordon
Posted:
Wed May 11, 2005 12:42 pm
by Glen
Matt, maybe a way to do it is find out if there is a pc sound trigger device, then tie that to Nikon Capture
Posted:
Wed May 11, 2005 2:19 pm
by rokkstar
The time machine looks like a good bet. How would the output of that trigger the camera though? I've read through the literature and it doesnt explain how it actually trips the shutter.
Reading more into this it seems like its a mammoth task.
Posted:
Wed May 11, 2005 2:22 pm
by gstark
A different approach might be use a sound trigger to trip a flash unit.
In a darkened room, your shutter could be held open, the flkash tripped, and then the shutter closed.
Posted:
Wed May 11, 2005 3:01 pm
by kipper
Rokkstar it triggers it via the IR shutter release. There is a
module/addon you buy for the Time Machine that provides IR output.
I was going to look into writing an IR release for my Atmel AVR controller. Then I was going to add on a motion sensor and a sound trigger.
Sigh.....suppose I'll have to find time to do it at one stage. Along with the rest of the things I want to do. Wish a day comprised of 32hours, still only requiring 8hours of sleep. Would make it so much easier to do things
Posted:
Wed May 11, 2005 3:08 pm
by sirhc55
Just remember Kipper that the life expectancy is 81 years in Australia, which means that we spend 27 years in bed - 27 years without taking one photograph
Posted:
Wed May 11, 2005 3:09 pm
by rokkstar
gstark wrote:A different approach might be use a sound trigger to trip a flash unit.
In a darkened room, your shutter could be held open, the flkash tripped, and then the shutter closed.
Thats another point. I was thinking about that too. I would still need a trigger to fire the flash on an event though. Can you rig up a sound trigger for the SB 800?
Posted:
Wed May 11, 2005 3:45 pm
by Glen
Matt, here is an article on High speed photography with sound triggers, including instructions on how to make the bits. Is that any help to you?
http://courses.ncssm.edu/hsi/pacsci/text.html
Posted:
Wed May 11, 2005 3:47 pm
by rokkstar
Just came across the same article, and its very useful.
Thanks Glen.
Thank you everyone else too.
Matt
Posted:
Wed May 11, 2005 3:53 pm
by Glen
Matt, the other way if you have an idea when the event will roughly be is just organise capture to take a shot every second. Of course that is not suitable if you are trying to get a bullet going through an apple.
Posted:
Wed May 11, 2005 8:51 pm
by phillipb
Sorry I can't help you with the trigger Matt, but it's nice to see you're already thinking about the decisive moment.