jimgalli
Subscriber
This is a proposal to solve a single problem with singular equipment. I want to duplicate the "Lartigue" effect of the leaning wheels on race cars at speed only possible with graflex curtain shutters. I am limiting myself to film and shutter speeds available off the shelf in 1908 - ish.
Here's what I propose; We'll take my '29 Model A Roadster out on our local dry lake bed and duplicate the distance and speeds of the 1908 race cars. We'd need a mobile dark room to get quick answers. I'm picturing a line of nuts with Graflex focal plane cameras standing in a row with a Model A speeding past them at 25 to 50 feet away. Not sure the "A" can actually go fast enough. It can achieve 60 or so. Those 1908 beasts may have been moving at 90+ mph.
There would be wine involved. Cars coming at you at great speed at close distances out in the middle of the desert. What could possibly go wrong? If the Model A can't achieve the necessary speed, we might need motorcycles. Tall wheels.
My initial guesses are that he was using his 3/8" slit at about 1/100 second f5.6 -ish with asa 25 film. Maybe they only had asa 12 or 10 in that time frame which gets you down in the 1/30th ranges. We know he was panning the moving vehicle. Sound like fun?
Here's what I propose; We'll take my '29 Model A Roadster out on our local dry lake bed and duplicate the distance and speeds of the 1908 race cars. We'd need a mobile dark room to get quick answers. I'm picturing a line of nuts with Graflex focal plane cameras standing in a row with a Model A speeding past them at 25 to 50 feet away. Not sure the "A" can actually go fast enough. It can achieve 60 or so. Those 1908 beasts may have been moving at 90+ mph.
There would be wine involved. Cars coming at you at great speed at close distances out in the middle of the desert. What could possibly go wrong? If the Model A can't achieve the necessary speed, we might need motorcycles. Tall wheels.
My initial guesses are that he was using his 3/8" slit at about 1/100 second f5.6 -ish with asa 25 film. Maybe they only had asa 12 or 10 in that time frame which gets you down in the 1/30th ranges. We know he was panning the moving vehicle. Sound like fun?