Bob W wrote:
I'm speaking from a position of almost total ignorance here, but
surely a bullet is travelling 2 or 3 times faster than sound? Over the
short distances involved is it really possible to do this?
I would have thought a light or electric trigger would be better.
e.g. fit the trigger or
På 23. jan. 2004 kl. 07.54 skrev mike wilson:
Bob W wrote:
I'm speaking from a position of almost total ignorance here, but
surely a bullet is travelling 2 or 3 times faster than sound? Over the
short distances involved is it really possible to do this?
It's possible to get bullets that travel at
Hi,
> But wouldn't large(ish) calibre bullets make a mess of what you're trying
> to photograph - depending on subject, of course? If it was an egg, for
> instance, wouldn't an air gun pellet make a more interesting shot than a
> .22 round?
there are some interesting examples here of someone shoo
Hi,
Tom Reese wrote:
> I will try to do this in daylight with flash equipment set relatively close
> to the target for maximum power. My camera will be a bit further away with a
> telephoto lens (I don't want splattered fruit all over my lens!). I thought
> I'd stop the lens down to f/22 and shoo
On 23/1/04, [EMAIL PROTECTED] disgorged:
>> I'd have thought a fairly simple switch activated mechanically by the
>> movement of the trigger would be a lot easier.
>>
>> --
>> Cheers,
>> Bob
>>
>Probably an air rifle pellet would still be in the barrel if you used a this
>method.
>
>Bill
>
Bu
For 22 cal. rifle and air rifle there are small commercial bullet traps available
at low cost, less than $50. They do an excellent job containing the bullets.
A switch on the trigger worked for me.>
Bob wrote:
>
>"I'm speaking from a position of almost total ignorance here, but
>surely a bul
Bob wrote:
"I'm speaking from a position of almost total ignorance here, but
surely a bullet is travelling 2 or 3 times faster than sound? Over the
short distances involved is it really possible to do this?"
bullet velocities can vary between 700 fps and 2300 fps for common guns.
There are other
Probably an air rifle pellet would still be in the barrel if you used a this
method.
Bill
> I'd have thought a fairly simple switch activated mechanically by the
> movement of the trigger would be a lot easier.
>
> --
> Cheers,
> Bob
>
>
Bob W <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Those were photos from Doc Edgerton's lab at MIT.
>> They used some good size flash tubes, and
>> I believe a microphone was used to trigger the flash.
>
>> Polaroid film and open the shutter, fire the gun,
>> which triggers the flash, and you see where the bull
;
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, January 23, 2004 12:53 PM
Subject: Re: does anyone have experience with high speed freezing the action
photograp...
> Hi,
>
> > It's possible to get bullets that travel at subsonic velocity. They
> > make less noise. Eve
Hi,
> It's possible to get bullets that travel at subsonic velocity. They
> make less noise. Even supersonic ones are not that fast, I think.
700 mph is quite fast! The reason I thought about it was that one of
my friends has discovered rats in her garden. I toyed with the idea of
getting a
Actually, Bob, many bullets are sub-sonic ...
2x faster is possible, AFAIK, but I can't recall
reading of any at 3x the speed of sound.
Perhaps some high powered rifles will get
up close to that speed.
> I'm speaking from a position of almost total ignorance here, but
> surely a bullet is travell
Hi,
> Those were photos from Doc Edgerton's lab at MIT.
> They used some good size flash tubes, and
> I believe a microphone was used to trigger the flash.
> Polaroid film and open the shutter, fire the gun,
> which triggers the flash, and you see where the bullet is.
> Then, adjust the microphon
Part of the equation to making this work lies in shortening the flash
duration. I don't know how current strobes work, but I recall that the
old Honeywell Strobonars could be as fast as 1/50.000 of a second when
the range was short and the flash was on auto exposure. In fact, I
think the Honeyw
Tom,
Those were photos from Doc Edgerton's lab at MIT.
They used some good size flash tubes, and
I believe a microphone was used to trigger the flash.
Polaroid film and open the shutter, fire the gun,
which triggers the flash, and you see where the bullet is.
Then, adjust the microphone closer o
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