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High VoltageThe night before I departed on my adventure to Townsville, Nature threw this one down..
I am hoping for more whilst I am in Queensland for the next two weeks.. Canon
Re: High VoltageNice capture BigV.
How long did it take you to capture this?
Re: High Voltage
The EXIF says 2 seconds. That's a great shot V. How many shots did you have to take to catch this? Or did you use your new magic device? Daniel Nikon D4, D2Xs, D70, Nikkors and Sigmas lenses from 10 to 400mm
www.DSAimages.com
Re: High Voltage
Ha! Sorry my exif viewer craps out each time firefox updates! So I couldn't see it.
Don't tell me you've got some light or thunder sensor going...
Re: High Voltage
Probably neither. It definitely won't be Thunder. Unless you get fried by the lightning, the thunder (sound) will get to the sensor loong after the flash is gone. Unlikely to the light as, while the flash will still be going on when the sensor fires, by the time the shutter goes it will be gone. Most likely an EM sensor that detects the first electrical discharge that creates the ionised path that the main strike follows to the ground. Still sounds like a magic device to me though & how it gets the camera to point in the right direction is completely beyond me. Greg
It's easy to be good... when there is nothing else to do
Re: High VoltageYup it works on EM discharge as well as sudden bright light change. I wanted it mainly to capture lightning during daylight as this has eluded me in the past. For night time, you can easily to timed exposures and hope you get a strike whilst exposing but this magic device makes it all a little bit more scientific.
Canon
Re: High VoltageVery tidy picture
so, does this magic device have a name? The only ones I know of are the sensors installed on aircraft...and they ain't cheap. gerry's photography journey
No amount of processing will fix bad composition - trust me i have tried.
Re: High VoltageSpectacular. Need i say more
Steve.
|D700| D2H | F5 | 70-200VR | 85 1.4 | 50 1.4 | 28-70 | 10.5 | 12-24 | SB800 | Website-> http://www.stevekilburn.com Leeds United for promotion in 2014 - Hurrah!!!
Re: High Voltage
ditto.
Re: High VoltageYep, I would say absolutely spectacular, wonderful timing.
President, A.A.A.A.A (Australian Association Against Acronym Abuse)
Canon EOS R6, RF 24-105 F4, RF 70-200 F4, RF 35mm F1.8, RF 16mm F2.8 "And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free." (John 8:32)
Re: High VoltageIt indeed has a name - it is a lightning trigger and as to cost, well that would depend whether you make one yourself or purchase one. If you make it yourself maybe 40 dollars all up, If you buy they can be as expensive as $450 landed here in Australia.
Canon
Re: High Voltage
Thanks BigV. It's about $270 in fleabay. doesn't seem to be a common commodity. Gerry, how about making one? I am sure you will have the technical know how...
Re: High Voltage
already on it http://www.glacialwanderer.com/hobbyrobotics/?p=16 but, methinks I will get one made up and not see any lightning for the next 12 months... so it better be cheap... I love to track down a US (Unserviceable) version of one these babies (with the hope of getting is working for non a/c use) http://www.avionix.com/store/stormscope.html I have put a few of these in aircraft and i reckon with the ability to pick up lightning at 200 nautical miles I will have the Sydney basin covered gerry's photography journey
No amount of processing will fix bad composition - trust me i have tried.
Re: High Voltage
I had a look at that earlier, Where can you get that Arduino thang?? EDIT* looks like available on Fleabay.
Re: High VoltageThis might do the trick, though you would need an interface to the camera. $AUD330
Greg
It's easy to be good... when there is nothing else to do
Re: High Voltagewow, thats one incredible looking shot!! love the main bolt of lightning but i love the chain lightning in the right hand corner, very very well captured!! i'd love the magic device!! but i think i will have to make do with my remote for a wee bit longer!! All in all, i look forward to seeing more shots like this, lets hope you get some more storms to photograph so we can see some more magic!!
2 x Fuji xt1,vg-xt1 grip, Fujinon xf 18-55mm 2.8-4, Fujinon xf 14mm, Fujinon 56mm 1.2.
Re: High Voltage
are you referring to this one?
gerry's photography journey
No amount of processing will fix bad composition - trust me i have tried.
Re: High VoltageNope, it is advertised on flea bay. You just have to pick the correct buy it now price as every now and then they chuck up a couple of cheaper prices to entice you. Also the Canon is cheaper than the Nikon because the Nikon cable has something like 10 connection wires to the Canon three connection wires.
Canon
Re: High Voltagefor the completeness of the thread...
The ones BigV is referring to can be obtained thru ebay, or thru their own webbie, prices appear to be the same..they do have a few ones starting at AUD170 with AUD43 postage so the best price you could get is around the 213 mark. ebay seller: http://shop.ebay.com.au/dcakaiser/m.html?_nkw=&_armrs=1&_from=&_ipg=&_trksid=p4340 The webbie... http://www.aeophoto.com/ now if only i had one right now..cause there is plenty of lightning up the midnorth coast at the moment.. gerry's photography journey
No amount of processing will fix bad composition - trust me i have tried.
Re: High Voltage
does it actually work on EM? or is it purely a light based sensor? I cannot see anything in its very limited spec sheet about EM based triggering. gerry's photography journey
No amount of processing will fix bad composition - trust me i have tried.
Re: High VoltageBiggerry, I had it sitting on the seat between Rockhampton and Mackay and decided to try it whilst driving along for interest and it was definitely firing the camera even though the strikes were not in the visible to the unit. When you get the unit it does say that em devices will trigger the device and you may get some false hits. Can only report what I have experienced. For what it is worth I think these are a brilliant little device, well made and work as advertised and its a lot safer for those of us that are not handy with a soldering iron...
Canon
Re: High VoltageBig V can you post a photo of the back of the unit where the sync cord originates? What my real question is, that can you modify the sync cord to fit if you change camera?
Re: High VoltageYes you can, the cord has a join half way down where they obviously swap the connections for each of the manufactures. It is only using the fire shutter wire as you have to set the lens to manual focus, other wise you would miss the shot as the lens hunts for focus. My friend has purchased the Nikon equivalent and it is exactly the same, only the end is different.
Canon
Re: High VoltageThanks BigV.
This is very tempting but I could buy nearly 4 manual ebay speedlites for this price.... Decisions...
Re: High VoltageOnly you can make that decision, for me it has been a goal of mine to capture reliably, daytime lightning strikes. Night time is easy but daytime has resulted in the necessity of using some technological wizardry to help!!! Good luck in making your decision and there is always time in the future to obtain that which is on the wish list, no one said you have to have it all now.
Canon
Re: High VoltageFor even more completeness to this thread, are we offtopic yet?
Regarding the EM sensoring side of things, these items only detect visible and IR light, they are directional to they *should* only go off when point in the lightning direction. Here is the response I got from the very helpful chap at AEOphoto.com
I am sooo keen to get one now.....
I know straight away which would get used more gerry's photography journey
No amount of processing will fix bad composition - trust me i have tried.
Re: High Voltage
That is where the problem lies.
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