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On 2017-04-01 05:31:19 -0700, Mitchell Holman said:
image The wrong assumpion was made regarding "making condensation rings". Those are not condensation rings, but the yellow prop tips caught in motion due to the "rolling shutter" effect with the camera being used. This is very common with cameras with rolling shutters of electronic shutters. These days most noticable with cameras in smart phones and current videoCams. Here are some extreme examples of the same phenomenon. -- Regards, Savageduck |
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On Sun, 2 Apr 2017 18:29:30 -0700, Savageduck
wrote: On 2017-04-01 05:31:19 -0700, Mitchell Holman said: image The wrong assumpion was made regarding "making condensation rings". Those are not condensation rings, but the yellow prop tips caught in motion due to the "rolling shutter" effect with the camera being used. This is very common with cameras with rolling shutters of electronic shutters. These days most noticable with cameras in smart phones and current videoCams. Here are some extreme examples of the same phenomenon. Must disagree. The image shows condensation vortices forming at the propeller tips in the moist ocean air. Technically, they are helices (spirals) rather than rings. An example I photographed 42 years ago (!) of an AC-130A taking off from McChord AFB. The phenomenon you describe can also be seen in older photos taken with film cameras with slower shutter mechanisms, causing propeller blades to appear bent. |
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On 2017-04-03 00:18:55 -0700, "Bob (not my real pseudonym)"
said: On Sun, 2 Apr 2017 18:29:30 -0700, Savageduck wrote: On 2017-04-01 05:31:19 -0700, Mitchell Holman said: image The wrong assumpion was made regarding "making condensation rings". Those are not condensation rings, but the yellow prop tips caught in motion due to the "rolling shutter" effect with the camera being used. This is very common with cameras with rolling shutters of electronic shutters. These days most noticable with cameras in smart phones and current videoCams. Here are some extreme examples of the same phenomenon. Must disagree. The image shows condensation vortices forming at the propeller tips in the moist ocean air. Technically, they are helices (spirals) rather than rings. An example I photographed 42 years ago (!) of an AC-130A taking off from McChord AFB. The phenomenon you describe can also be seen in older photos taken with film cameras with slower shutter mechanisms, causing propeller blades to appear bent. image I guess we shall just have to agree to disagree. Even in the photo you provided, you have demonstrated a shutter effect rather than capturing prop induced condensation. -- Regards, Savageduck |
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