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DIY Sound-Activated High-Speed Photography

eldavojohn writes "Have you ever wanted to catch the perfect photo with your SLR camera but couldn't time the shot just right? Photography enthusiast Matt Richardson brings us an instructional video over at Make Magazine that shows how to use some very basic breadboarding and an Arduino Nano to do some high-speed flash photography that is timed by sound instead of your finger hitting the button on the camera. He pops a balloon and smashes a wine glass to show some results. His code is available on Github, and you can find more of this sly hardware hacker on his YouTube channel."

5 of 106 comments (clear)

  1. OK by hjf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Seriously, why do we need an Arduino to make a sound trigger?

    Oh yes, all the cool kids use arduinos now, so if you make an electronics project without one, no one is going to read your article.

    1. Re:OK by Technician · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I did this in the 1970's for a photography project using an SCR to handle the high strobe trigger voltage (used to be ~160 volts on the shutter contacts) and the amplifier from a portable tape recorder to amplify a microphone to enough voltage to trip the SCR. With a strobe mounted off the camera and the camera on bulb setting, I took pictures of light bulbs crashing onto the sidewalk. Due to the lighting angle, most people thought it was taken in the daytime in sunlight. I adjusted the delay after impact by changing the distance of the mic from the bulb. 6 feet provides a good delay. With the mic too close, the bulb looks like it is sitting on the sidewalk with a few cracks in the glass. The delay was necessary to get the bulb in a reasonable amount of shards.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
  2. I saw this done in the 70's! by Announcer · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Back then, a similar project used op amps to trigger a flash unit. It was an article in one of the electronics mags I saw back in the late 1970's, titled "Build the Thunderbolt". (I Googled it, but came up empty.)

    You adjusted the timing of when the flash was triggered, by moving the microphone closer or farther from the sound source. You could also have added a 555 timer, if you needed a longer delay than was feasible with a longer distance.

    It reminds me of a discussion at the Electronics firm I am consulting for. They needed to add a 1/2 second delay to the startup of a device in a new product. I suggested they add a 555 timer circuit. They looked at me like I had two heads. Their solution was to throw a microcontroller into the product. Come on, guys! It can be done with a 555, a cap, and two resistors. It's crash-proof, too. Whatever happened to K.I.S.S?

    --
    Willie...
  3. need for copylefted educational photos by bcrowell · · Score: 3, Interesting

    For a long time, the famous Edgerton photos were a staple of physics textbooks. E.g., you could see the (huge) deformation of a tennis ball being hit by a racket. But the Edgerton images are all copyrighted, and it would be really helpful to have CC-BY-SA-compatible photos that could be used instead in places like Wikipedia. I'm the author of some copylefted physics textbooks, and I really haven't been able to find much that's useful. There's this category on wikimedia commons, but there's currently not much in it that's useful educationally. IMO there are a couple of things that would be useful in physics education: (1) an image like the tennis racket, showing how an object's center of mass accelerates even while it's in contact with another object; (2) an image like the bullet going through the apple, which I believe shows that the speed of sound in the apple is less than the speed of the bullet.

  4. Re:Quicker Than Sound by lee1 · · Score: 5, Funny

    You don't need a flash for fireworks either. So why am I surrounded by people taking flash pictures of the sky whenever I go to a fireworks show? So far I have been able to resist grabbing them by their collars and screaming at them, but I'm not sure how long I can hold out.