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Old 21 June 2007, 09:52   #1
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Camera System

I am trying to devise a system of say four cameras that feed in via a selector switch into a recording device such as a DV recorder or similar.

I guess the first item on the shopping list is a small waterproof camera.

I have ordered one of these to try out from ebay.

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...m=200121338624

Then I was thinking one of these to record from the cameras?

http://cgi.ebay.com/Mustek-PVR-H140-...QQcmdZViewItem

Then the only thing needed is a way of switching between cameras?

Any of you photography buffs out there know if this will work? I am not expecting broadcast quality but will it work?

Chris
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Old 21 June 2007, 10:11   #2
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have a look here and talk to these guys. they seem really helpful...

they have a multi camera system on the site...

I'm keen to get a bullet cam fitted to mine, but it's always been the recorder that seems to be the expensive/temperamental part

http://www.dogcamsport.co.uk/index.html
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Old 21 June 2007, 15:15   #3
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Try these bad boys; www.actioncameras.co.uk
if they dont have it, it aint worth having & there cheap
Mike
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Old 21 June 2007, 15:58   #4
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Ribtastic

Hi this is it
Action cameras London,
Just spoke to them & this is the pup's £249.00 inc vat complete package, waterproof cam with 1.5m lead, recording device 30gig with playback (not waterproof) 24hr record time, built in battery rechargable approx 3hr play time, record button on lead to cam all waterproof!!!! ARCHOS 404 ACTION PACKAGE playback is exellent qualty. The police use um . http://www.actioncameras.co.uk/acata..._Packages.html
So good ive just brought one
Mike.
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Old 21 June 2007, 18:01   #5
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Sorry try this; www.actioncameras.co.uk
Mike
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Old 22 June 2007, 12:54   #6
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Whatever you do don't get a hard drive recording device if you intend to go out in rough weather - get one that takes SD cards or similar - hard drives will not last!

They have them on Amazon for about £80!
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When a boat looks that good who needs tubes!!!
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Old 22 June 2007, 13:34   #7
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Agree - solid state the way to go.
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Old 22 June 2007, 22:17   #8
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What about cameras that take DV tapes, the DogCam guys suggest that using video cameras that take DV Tapes are the best way to record from their cameras?

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Old 25 June 2007, 11:39   #9
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What about cameras that take DV tapes, the DogCam guys suggest that using video cameras that take DV Tapes are the best way to record from their cameras?

Chris
Only if it's hand held - as soon as you strap something down a tape or hard drive will not live for long!
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Old 25 June 2007, 13:14   #10
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SO if you made up case with plenty of padding to hold the camera in would that work Cookee?

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Old 25 June 2007, 13:33   #11
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We tried the Gecko helmet camera system at the Southampton Boat Show a couple of years ago and it wouldn't play anything after being in the race boat for a few minutes - and that was down Southampton water in fairly calm conditions - it was a hard drive system with padding - it would work ok if stuffed down your lifejacket, but that isn't an option for any length of time really!

Have a look on Amazon they are around £80.00 plus an SD card which are cheap as chips - that way if it gets wet or damaged it's not £300.00 down the drain!
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Old 25 June 2007, 18:35   #12
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Solid state is best for reliability, however it all depends what you want the footage for. Cheap solid state will be (relatively) low quality, expensive rugged solid state (£1600 ish) will be near DVD quality.

MiniDV tape gives superior quality even to the expensive solid state, but is (obviously) much more delicate. It gives the best quality though, and is the media of choice for the BBC etc in action footage.

The footage from the RNLI on BBC's Seaside Rescue is primarily filmed on miniDV tape using recorders with remote mics and cameras. Recorders are mounted into waterproof padded pelicases:

http://www.peliproducts.co.uk/cases.htm

and either fitted to the boats or carried in a special pouch on the back of the helmet camera wearer's lifejacket.

The recorders have been very reliable - that said, a simple solid state combined camera / recorder (like the Action 2000) is a lot cheaper and (depending on what you want to do with the footage) may be more than adequate. No point having a 25 MBit/s full Pal video sample if you are going to down sample it and stick it on youtube.

Cheers

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Old 25 June 2007, 19:25   #13
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Ihad the Action 2000 camera and it really isn't up to much!
The only way to go is the same way as Cookie- solid state with a pro bullet cam. All in all not too too expensive for hours of amusement during those boring cold winter months.....
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Old 26 June 2007, 07:55   #14
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Quote:
Originally Posted by chris123 View Post
Solid state is best for reliability, however it all depends what you want the footage for. Cheap solid state will be (relatively) low quality, expensive rugged solid state (£1600 ish) will be near DVD quality.

MiniDV tape gives superior quality even to the expensive solid state, but is (obviously) much more delicate. It gives the best quality though, and is the media of choice for the BBC etc in action footage.

The footage from the RNLI on BBC's Seaside Rescue is primarily filmed on miniDV tape using recorders with remote mics and cameras. Recorders are mounted into waterproof padded pelicases:

http://www.peliproducts.co.uk/cases.htm

and either fitted to the boats or carried in a special pouch on the back of the helmet camera wearer's lifejacket.

The recorders have been very reliable - that said, a simple solid state combined camera / recorder (like the Action 2000) is a lot cheaper and (depending on what you want to do with the footage) may be more than adequate. No point having a 25 MBit/s full Pal video sample if you are going to down sample it and stick it on youtube.

Cheers

Chris

Chris - How does the above compare to the solid state recorders price wise? I'm sure some people might be interested, although the quality is surprising and is a lot better than Youtube quality!
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Old 26 June 2007, 08:39   #15
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Where can one find a card based recorder for sale that records in a decent resolution?
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Old 26 June 2007, 19:01   #16
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Where can one find a card based recorder for sale that records in a decent resolution?
Tony
The Ovation Flashback 2 will record MPEG2 with variable bit rate up to 9.5 MBit/sec max:

http://www.ovation.co.uk/FlashBack-2...ged%20DVR.html

It's not cheap though (not really aimed at the consumer market). I'm sure others exist.

Cheers

Chris
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Old 26 June 2007, 20:09   #17
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Chris - How does the above compare to the solid state recorders price wise? I'm sure some people might be interested, although the quality is surprising and is a lot better than Youtube quality!
Unfortunately miniDV recorders are getting thin on the ground, or at least ones with the required functionality are (sorry, should have said that before ). You need one with composite video (and audio if you are using a mike) inputs, and ideally firewire input as well as output so you can edit on a pc and output back to tape.

I'm only really familiar with Sony kit, and it looks like none of their latest range has this functionality. Older units (eg Sony HC32, HC96, PC55, PC109) are available second hand or still stocked new in some shops (£300 to £500). Other manufacturers may still sell new products to fit the bill.

You are then looking at a waterproof camera with composite output (£100 to £150), waterproof case (£20 to £30), camera battery pack (12 vdc NiCD or NiMH), cabling and connectors. You'll need to be happy with basic DIY, wiring and soldering.

The other challenge is controlling the recorder - you really do not want to be opening the waterproof case to start / stop recorder or change tapes whilst at sea. The Sony HC32, HC96 and PC109 use a wired system called LANC for which remote controls are available - I think Canon also use LANC.

Finally, if you are going to be 'wearing' the camera, you need to consider safety - if the camera is attached in some way to your head, and the recorder is on your back or in the boat, you need some sort of breakaway connector between the two, so if the worst happens the connector just pulls apart before it takes your head off.

Cheers

Chris
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Old 27 June 2007, 05:07   #18
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Well here goes..
This is the plan....
After trying a couple of different methods of attaching cameras to my a frame ( and ripped the threads out ) i am going to mount a 580 line bullet cam running cables down to the storage locker under the back seat. In a waterproof box a recorder(maybe a sold state one) and power connections. If all goes to plan change my Raymarine c80 for a e80 so i can line in the video to see everything lines up ok.Ideally a switch on the console to start and stop recording but I don't think this is possible . Aiptek make a cheap sd card based camcorder with a line in, so i might try that. Any thoughts?
thanks
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Old 27 June 2007, 16:15   #19
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If you get an E80 I would be very tempted to get a camera that is good in low light as well. Then you can have an IR illuminator and drive around at night and still see where you are going!!! Also a camera that is waterproof so you can chuck it over the side and see/record what's under you.

MAYBE something like this?

http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/CCTV-Sony-Fish...QQcmdZViewItem
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Old 27 June 2007, 19:22   #20
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tony View Post
Well here goes..
This is the plan....
After trying a couple of different methods of attaching cameras to my a frame ( and ripped the threads out ) i am going to mount a 580 line bullet cam running cables down to the storage locker under the back seat. In a waterproof box a recorder(maybe a sold state one) and power connections. If all goes to plan change my Raymarine c80 for a e80 so i can line in the video to see everything lines up ok.Ideally a switch on the console to start and stop recording but I don't think this is possible . Aiptek make a cheap sd card based camcorder with a line in, so i might try that. Any thoughts?
thanks
Tony
If you go for a 'lipstick' camera with a standard 'tripod' thread on the back, you can get a range of mounts that should allow you to clamp it to your A frame, eg:

http://www.b-hague.co.uk/Mounting%20Brackets.htm

Clamps like the mini clamp (MC) work well in my experience.

I had a look at the Aiptek website, but could not see which camcorder you were looking at?

Cheers

Chris
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