Focal plane distortion

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Leigh B

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I tried 1/30s, 1/25s, 1/20s, 1/15s, and 1/10s multiple times slowly panning cars move 50mph perpendicular to me
Hi Sirius,

Like I said... Your shutter speeds are too slow.

To get the "sliding" effect you need a narrow slit moving across the film.

At the speeds you listed I believe the SG focal plane shutter is completely open, which will not deliver the desired result.

- Leigh
 
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(there was a url link here which no longer exists)

I will have to revisit it again soon as the weather is nice now, I never really got the chance to do it, and when I did set it up, I didn't have a target I could get to easily to experiment with. Plus I think a motor for rewinding would provide a better/steadier flow than hand winding.
 

Sirius Glass

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Hi Sirius,

Like I said... Your shutter speeds are too slow.

To get the "sliding" effect you need a narrow slit moving across the film.

At the speeds you listed I believe the SG focal plane shutter is completely open, which will not deliver the desired result.

- Leigh

Thanks, I will try it again with a smaller slit. I guess that I had bad advice before.
 

Sirius Glass

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So if I use 400 speed film, and shoot at tension 1 and 1/8" slit [1/350] @ f/16 and my 15" lens rather than the 7.5" lens, it should work!
 

jp498

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I'd hardly call that a hill, despite its big name in motorsports. Still sounds like fun though.

http://www.climbtotheclouds.com/history/ Mount Washington Hillclimb claims to predate Shelsley Walsh by a year. I photographed there last year, some of it with a speed graphic. Plenty of cars with wire wheels. Didn't get the focal plane distortion I wanted; perhaps a little, but not much. I'll experiment more before returning. Spectators and photographers have to board a bus or van at 6am to be delivered to the various lookout spots along the track. You have to stay at your lookout spot (or within a few hundred feet of it) till noon when there is a break in racing runs.
 

E. von Hoegh

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So if I use 400 speed film, and shoot at tension 1 and 1/8" slit [1/350] @ f/16 and my 15" lens rather than the 7.5" lens, it should work!

You also need a car moving at a decent rate of speed. The old pictures of old cars were taken at races, and those old cars were faster than you might realise. The Locomobile "Old 16" was capable of over 100 MPH, and was built in 1906. Try it on a car going 80 and above. The wheels on the old cars were a lot bigger, too - don't expect the same degree of distortion on a modern car going at the same speed, even when the slit travel time is the same.
 

E. von Hoegh

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Doesn't a car like that just beg to be photographed with some focal plane distortion along with the smoking tires?

I saw that car in person in the late 90s, when they were running it with stub exhausts and preventing the rear springs winding up by chaining the rear axle to the frame. 12 cylinders of 122 cubic inches each makes a very interesting sound.:smile:
 

Sirius Glass

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The wheels on the old cars were a lot bigger, too - don't expect the same degree of distortion on a modern car going at the same speed, even when the slit travel time is the same.

Well I do have 35" tires ... will those be large enough?
 

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Sirius Glass

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The only thing to shoot that monstrosity with is a 40mm quad Bofors.:smile:

I need someone to use my 38mm Hasselblad 903 SWC to take a photograph at that location with the Jeep completely filling the frame.

Anyone interested in a road trip to Moab?
 

Sirius Glass

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Leigh B

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That last animated graphic is impressive, but I don't think it takes into account the upsidedown/reverse of the image at the focal plane.
The graphic is illustrating a principle.

The specifics will vary depending on the direction of shutter movement and other factors.

That does not in any way invalidate the description of the process.

- Leigh
 

removed account4

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That last animated graphic is impressive, but I don't think it takes into account the upsidedown/reverse of the image at the focal plane.

:laugh: don't be such a party pooper !
you should know that jacques henri was standing on his head
when he took the photograph, or a thief was holding him by the ankles trying to
shake all his francs free from his pockets, or he held his camera upside down trying to slow the shutter
down like you can with a speed graphic to get it to be slowish ... or ...
 

jp498

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A speed graphic is easy to shoot upside down. Just gotta use your left hand to operate the shutter and darkslide. The bed makes a nice sunshade. I'd imagine a graflex SLR would be a little harder to use upside down; that's where you need someone holding you upside down.
 

removed account4

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A speed graphic is easy to shoot upside down. Just gotta use your left hand to operate the shutter and darkslide. The bed makes a nice sunshade. I'd imagine a graflex SLR would be a little harder to use upside down; that's where you need someone holding you upside down.

a theif comes in handy ! :wink:

"i'm not robbing him, i'm helping him take the photograph!"
 
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