Revenki's photos with the keyword: camcorder

Road Trip: Day 5

23 Aug 2010 90
A little hard to see here, but there is water and chips of ice falling from the undercut below this piece of ice. It sounded like someone slowly pouring shards of glass onto concrete.

Road Trip: Day 5

Road Trip: Day 5

Road Trip: Day 5

23 Aug 2010 88
Peeking through the keyhole

Road Trip: Day 5

23 Aug 2010 107
A little glowing iceberg

Road Trip: Day 5

23 Aug 2010 69
Kept waiting for this chunk of ice to teeter over, but it never did.

Road Trip: Day 5

23 Aug 2010 87
Kept waiting for this chunk of ice to teeter over, but it never did.

Road Trip: Day 5

23 Aug 2010 77
Kept waiting for this chunk of ice to teeter over, but it never did.

Road Trip: Day 5

23 Aug 2010 76
Rubber ducky

Road Trip: Day 5

23 Aug 2010 80
This ice floe looked surprisingly like Michigan's lower peninsula.

Road Trip: Day 5

23 Aug 2010 79
The lagoon with the source glacier in the background.

Road Trip: Day 5

Road Trip: Day 5

23 Aug 2010 69
Rubber ducky

Road Trip: Day 5

23 Aug 2010 65
Rubber ducky

Double Header

04 Apr 2010 157
Another tripod hack, this time a crossbar for mounting two camcorders for filming Monday's Space Shuttle launch (STS-131). (No, the tripod is not really that short...) The plan is to mount one camcorder with a telephoto extension on the fixed quick-release (left) and adjust the entire assembly to align that camera at maximum zoom looking at LC-39A to get the ignition and early liftoff. The second mount, a small Promaster ball head, is for a second camcorder, with a somewhat wider field of view, independently pointed at the same pad with slightly higher inclination, to capture ignition, liftoff, and the first minute or so of the launch. Dunno if it'll work, but there's no harm trying. All told, there's about $40 worth of materials involved, $28 of which was the ball head which I had to buy for the project (already had the QR plate and shoes and other bits and pieces). The crossbar is a piece of 2" x 3/8" steel C-channel from Home Depot, cut to 12" long, drilled for 1/4" bolts, and covered with black gaffer tape (in lieu of black paint, which I don't have the time to do right now). Oddly enough, the gaffer tape makes it look pretty professional, as if it's powder-coated. 1/4"-20 bolts hold the two mounts on at either end. In the center is the spare 3/8" shoe that came with my Vanguard Tracker 4 tripod, with the screw removed and replaced by another 1/4"-20 bolt and nut (need to get some washers tomorrow morning). And yes, I did drill a 5/16" hole in the bar to receive the set screw on the shoe, because I am that detail-oriented. The Manfrotto QR plate on the left was the same width as the C-channel, which posed a small problem - it wanted to ride on the tines of the C. To fill the gap, without having to fuss about finding something exactly the right thickness, I took two leftover composite door-hanging shims, cut 2" long pieces from them where their thicknesses added up right, and then drilled an oversized hole in the middle. I then oversized the hole lengthwise to the crossbar, so that when I assembled everything and snugged up the bolt, the wedge-like shims would slip just a little bit until they were exactly the right height inside the C-channel. Brilliant, if I do say so myself...

Double Header

04 Apr 2010 177
Another tripod hack, this time a crossbar for mounting two camcorders for filming Monday's Space Shuttle launch (STS-131). The plan is to mount one camcorder with a telephoto extension on the fixed quick-release (left) and adjust the entire assembly to align that camera at maximum zoom looking at LC-39A to get the ignition and early liftoff. The second mount, a small Promaster ball head, is for a second camcorder, with a somewhat wider field of view, independently pointed at the same pad with slightly higher inclination, to capture ignition, liftoff, and the first minute or so of the launch. Dunno if it'll work, but there's no harm trying. All told, there's about $40 worth of materials involved, $28 of which was the ball head which I had to buy for the project (already had the QR plate and shoes and other bits and pieces). The crossbar is a piece of 2" x 3/8" steel C-channel from Home Depot, cut to 12" long, drilled for 1/4" bolts, and covered with black gaffer tape (in lieu of black paint, which I don't have the time to do right now). Oddly enough, the gaffer tape makes it look pretty professional, as if it's powder-coated. 1/4"-20 bolts hold the two mounts on at either end. In the center is the spare 3/8" shoe that came with my Vanguard Tracker 4 tripod, with the screw removed and replaced by another 1/4"-20 bolt and nut (need to get some washers tomorrow morning). And yes, I did drill a 5/16" hole in the bar to receive the set screw on the shoe, because I am that detail-oriented. The Manfrotto QR plate on the left was the same width as the C-channel, which posed a small problem - it wanted to ride on the tines of the C. To fill the gap, without having to fuss about finding something exactly the right thickness, I took two leftover composite door-hanging shims, cut 2" long pieces from them where their thicknesses added up right, and then drilled an oversized hole in the middle. I then oversized the hole lengthwise to the crossbar, so that when I assembled everything and snugged up the bolt, the wedge-like shims would slip just a little bit until they were exactly the right height inside the C-channel. Brilliant, if I do say so myself...