toyfel
Established
raid
Dad Photographer
163 nanoseconds per frame. WOW! 6 Million Frames Per Second. That is almost 4 times faster than the fastest 35mm camera that I've had my hands on. But it was made in 1960.
raid
Dad Photographer
Brian,
Which camera did you try?
Which camera did you try?
Beckman and Whitley framing camera. Helium Turbine Motor Drive. It's an SLR. And it is very, very big.
chris00nj
Young Luddite
Beckman and Whitley framing camera. Helium Turbine Motor Drive. It's an SLR. And it is very, very big.
I thought you were being sarcastic with your 1st post!
The advantages of working in a Research Lab. This camera was bought in 1960 for $120,000. Beckman and Whitley cameras are still in use, and this one was being refurbished. The Helium Turbine is used to spin a prism, which is used to expose the stationary strip of 35mm film. It is layed out on a Drum, and each frame is illuminated with a fast strobe light synchronized to the spinning prism.
Kevin
Rainbow Bridge
Some applications that may benefit from the approach include observing the communication between cells, or the activity of neurons.
.......:bang:
charjohncarter
Veteran
I couldn't tell does this camera have a lens?
Sounds like a pigtailed photo-detector on the end of a fiber with a 6Mhz A/D convertor, and a bunch of them running in parallel. So if the fiber bundle is run to a camera back such as an NPC Polaroid Camera Back for the Nikon F2,
http://cgi.ebay.com/Nikon-F2-Polaro...5|66:2|65:12|39:1|240:1318|301:1|293:1|294:50
Then each pigtailed fiber run to the A/D convertor, set the Nikon F2 to "T", hit the data acquisition button- Whammo. Hook up a frame buffer and the solid state recorder.
http://cgi.ebay.com/Nikon-F2-Polaro...5|66:2|65:12|39:1|240:1318|301:1|293:1|294:50
Then each pigtailed fiber run to the A/D convertor, set the Nikon F2 to "T", hit the data acquisition button- Whammo. Hook up a frame buffer and the solid state recorder.
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