Technical Science: Nikon D3's Quick Start
ByAndy YangIssue a table before 1 month
(Slide your mouse over the image side to side for animation)
Operation Method: move the mouse to the left or right of the animation to see the animation.
The above video, which seems to have been shot with a high-speed camera, is actually the result of the cooperation between two filmmakers, Marianne Oelund and Jeffery Friedl. Marianne is the creator of the original photo. What looks like a film here is actually a combination of photos, and Jeffery uses this magical way to link the photo together.
Marianne takes a picture of another D3 (good guy ...) frame before being shot in the D3, shot on the D3 used to prepare the SB-900 was used for lighting) and the D3 was taken on the SB-800 was used (for the time ). Both cameras are connected to a central controller with a sensor. The central controller will first ask the camera to take a photo, then, the camera is required to take a photo, and the delay between the two camera lights is used to calculate the delay of the road. After that, we can figure out different segments of the kubernetes in the form of a large and small interval.
Some of the technologies in Jeffery are relatively simple. The mouse is far away from the left margin to determine which picture to show. Attention is thinking about using this method to present XD.
From the slow motion film, you can clearly see that the main reflection is hidden (there is still a small reflection hidden in the back), and the quick attention is divided into two and a half open and closed, the whole process of the main reflective memory bit and the fast response bit. Based on Jeffery's computation, kubernetes ran a full 2.5-centimeter margin (because it was a FF camera) within three milliseconds ), the speed is about 8.7 meters per second, or about 31.3 kilometers per hour @@. This acceleration is terrible!
The following figure shows the EOS10 Quick Start that Xiaoyun found on the Internet. It was probably shot using Casio F1. I don't know why. It seems that the structure of the mailbox is very clear...