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Drift HD cameras hands down.
The new ones have remote with light indicators to remind you if your recording or not. I have got several videos posted to youtube, just look up my name, Justin Rizor. Next Season I will be adding a wing mounted camera, using a suction cup and a wing cuff made out of a medical plastic called "aqua plastic." You just heat the sheet of plastic to 160deg in water, then drape over the surface you want, it cures slowly and hard. I know about this product as my broken thumb has a splint made out of the stuff right now. Any question feel free to contact me thru youtube. The editing software is where my learning curves needs to begin. Good luck On Monday, December 31, 2012 11:11:25 AM UTC-7, KiloKilo wrote: I'm getting interested in taking some hd videos on XC missions ... is the GoPro Hero 3 considered the best camera for this type of project. I've also been fooling with a new Video Editor called Power Director ... great app... much better then then older software I had before. I re-reprocessed a file Evan Ludeman provided ... and I put a re-edited version on you tube. I don't think the base video is HD quality - and I used a stock audio track - but you can see how nice the transitions and other features work. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EMUGr...ature=youtu.be KK |
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Where do you get this? My search found some strange results that won't
be useful for wing mounted cameras. Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA Eric, I believe it is called shape memory polymer. A Google search will bring up many options. Here is an interesting one. http://trs-new.jpl.nasa.gov/dspace/b.../1/05-0564.pdf |
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The brand name is Aquaplast. Here's a link you could use:
http://www.wisdomking.com/aquaplast-splinting. You can get it in 18x24 sheets 1/16 or 1/8 inch thick. Charlie On Dec 31 2012, 10:27*pm, Eric Greenwell wrote: On 12/31/2012 5:26 PM, wrote: Next Season I will be adding a wing mounted camera, using a suction cup and a wing cuff made out of a medical plastic called "aqua plastic." Where do you get this? My search found some strange results that won't be useful for wing mounted cameras. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) |
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I will be ordering from them tomorrow, little hung over today..
http://www.wisdomking.com/aquaplast-splinting I might take a video of the process and post it if I am successful. Happy New Year to all On Dec 31 2012, 10:27*pm, Eric Greenwell wrote: On 12/31/2012 5:26 PM, wrote: Next Season I will be adding a wing mounted camera, using a suction cup and a wing cuff made out of a medical plastic called "aqua plastic." Where do you get this? My search found some strange results that won't be useful for wing mounted cameras. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) |
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On Tue, 01 Jan 2013 14:06:28 -0800, jmraa757 wrote:
I will be ordering from them tomorrow, little hung over today.. http://www.wisdomking.com/aquaplast-splinting I might take a video of the process and post it if I am successful. I've done a little research and have discovered that the generic term for all these products is 'splinting materials', which are roughly split into two types of material: 1) "casting tape". This is a knitted synthetic fiberglass fabric impregnated with a water-activated polyurethane resin. This is dipped in room temperature water for about 10 secs, squeezed to remove the excess water and smoothed into position using gloves. It sets in 3-5 mins and, in the case of a splint is hard enough to be load-bearing in 20 mins. The tape is 50-100mm wide and seems to come in 2m lengths. Load bearing structures are typically 3-6 layers thick and load-bearing splints are recommended to be 4 layers. 2) sheets of solid or perforated thermosetting plastic which are cut to shape, heated to soften and then moulded around whatever they are meant to fit. This material is quite a bit more expensive than casting tape. Confusingly, 'Aquaplast' seems to be the thermoset material rather than casting tape. Some brand names for casting tape a - 3M Scotchcast Plus Casting Tapes - Alto Cast - Ossur Techform These are available from medical supply houses and on eBay. OTOH, you may find its cheaper to pick up some glasscloth, epoxy resin and a decent release film from your local model store and use these to make the wing glove from these: you'll need the release film in either case. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
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On 1/1/2013 2:51 PM, Martin Gregorie wrote:
I've done a little research and have discovered that the generic term for all these products is 'splinting materials', which are roughly split into two types of material: 1) "casting tape". This is a knitted synthetic fiberglass fabric impregnated with a water-activated polyurethane resin. This is dipped in room temperature water for about 10 secs, squeezed to remove the excess water and smoothed into position using gloves. It sets in 3-5 mins and, in the case of a splint is hard enough to be load-bearing in 20 mins. The tape is 50-100mm wide and seems to come in 2m lengths. Load bearing structures are typically 3-6 layers thick and load-bearing splints are recommended to be 4 layers. 2) sheets of solid or perforated thermosetting plastic which are cut to shape, heated to soften and then moulded around whatever they are meant to fit. This material is quite a bit more expensive than casting tape. Confusingly, 'Aquaplast' seems to be the thermoset material rather than casting tape. Some brand names for casting tape a - 3M Scotchcast Plus Casting Tapes - Alto Cast - Ossur Techform These are available from medical supply houses and on eBay. OTOH, you may find its cheaper to pick up some glasscloth, epoxy resin and a decent release film from your local model store and use these to make the wing glove from these: you'll need the release film in either case. The Aquaplast looks great, but I'll stick with the cloth and epoxy, I think. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me)nyurl.com/yfs7tnz |
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On Tue, 01 Jan 2013 19:41:48 -0800, Eric Greenwell wrote:
On 1/1/2013 2:51 PM, Martin Gregorie wrote: I've done a little research and have discovered that the generic term for all these products is 'splinting materials', which are roughly split into two types of material: 1) "casting tape". This is a knitted synthetic fiberglass fabric impregnated with a water-activated polyurethane resin. This is dipped in room temperature water for about 10 secs, squeezed to remove the excess water and smoothed into position using gloves. It sets in 3-5 mins and, in the case of a splint is hard enough to be load-bearing in 20 mins. The tape is 50-100mm wide and seems to come in 2m lengths. Load bearing structures are typically 3-6 layers thick and load-bearing splints are recommended to be 4 layers. 2) sheets of solid or perforated thermosetting plastic which are cut to shape, heated to soften and then moulded around whatever they are meant to fit. This material is quite a bit more expensive than casting tape. Confusingly, 'Aquaplast' seems to be the thermoset material rather than casting tape. Some brand names for casting tape a - 3M Scotchcast Plus Casting Tapes - Alto Cast - Ossur Techform These are available from medical supply houses and on eBay. OTOH, you may find its cheaper to pick up some glasscloth, epoxy resin and a decent release film from your local model store and use these to make the wing glove from these: you'll need the release film in either case. The Aquaplast looks great, but I'll stick with the cloth and epoxy, I think. That would be my choice too. Three reasons: (1) I know how to work with glass/epoxy (2) making a fairly wide glove, 250mm - 300mm, seems like a good idea (3) the need for a good bond between the glove and the camera mount (2) and (3) are probably be easier with glass cloth than with either type of splint material. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
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