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More Cheap Aerial Photography

ptorrone writes "If you have an old digital camera laying around and pick up a $1.50 Timer Chip from RadioShack or DigiKey you can turn it in to a great aerial photography camera, this how-to from Engadget shows how they did it along with some other projects with the modded camera." We also linked to part 1.

6 of 157 comments (clear)

  1. A Better Site by nemski · · Score: 4, Informative

    After the webpage in the article gets /.'d, take a look at this more comprehensive site on areial photography Kite Aerial Photography.

    --
    Some people have a way with words, others not have way.
  2. Legal ... for now by YetAnotherName · · Score: 4, Informative

    Get into this hobby while you can before it becomes difficult and/or illegal.

  3. A $1.50 timer chip? by Jason1729 · · Score: 4, Informative

    I've never paid more than 20 cents for a 555, and I can think of at least 5 stores within 10 miles of my house that sell them for that price in single unit quantities.

    Anyway, this is the 21st century. Why not do it the "right" way with a $1 PIC12F629?

    Jason
    ProfQuotes

  4. Re:"they" ? by ptorrone · · Score: 4, Informative

    i wrote most of the article, but as always...there was and is a team of us, so it's more fair to say "they and we". i can't take credit for everything, it's a group effort.

  5. more fun /. projects by alatesystems · · Score: 4, Informative

    The guy behind this, Phillip Torrone, has done a TON more cool stuff. Check out his site/blog for tons more stuff.

    This dude is now my personal hero of geekdom. He builds robots and gear and has pics of tons of stuff on his site.

    Chris

  6. Re:DHS by morcheeba · · Score: 5, Informative

    That's interesting, but I don't know how effective it is.

    First, at altitude, focus isn't necessary because everything will be close enough to infinity (hyperfocal). So destroying an autofocus sensor won't help.

    Second, my camera can withstand looking at the sun for a period of time (not much time, I'm sure). And that's a focused light source -- it'll be hard to make a laser brighter than the sun over such a large area. (easy to do if you point the laser, but hard to do if it's diffused). No real use in using a laser, though - you don't need the monochromaticity or the coherentness, so you might as well use a large xenon strobe behind an IR filter.

    Lastly, won't stop any film-based camera: a cheap disposable or an Estes Cineroc.

    Hope not too much taxpayer money is spent on this system!