Digital cameras almost invariably have a delay timer built in. Shouldn't take long to lower a camera down a ten metre pipe, so just put the timer on and start lowering. Sure, it'll only take one pic at a time, but probably be quicker and certainly less destructive and expensive than breaking the camera and attaching remote control wires to it.
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Mini digital cameras: An engineering challenge
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Of course, the advantage of a webcam is you'll be able to see that you're photographing the whole area. I'd go for a high quality webcam with a super bright LED array, lower and slowly sweep 360, then adjust the angle and repeat.Comment
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Thought about going for the mini webcam but we want to use the pictures for printing and quality could be an issue. The cavity is massive and I mean the size of St Paul's cathedral massive so there really needs to be a decent amount of light.
d000hg> the pipe is man made and is about 15 meters long, thickness of a bottle of beer.
Quite like the timer on a disposable camera idea, I could just drop the thing down on a rope although I wonder if the thing will stop moving around by the time the camera goes off.
I'm thinking that I could drop some kind of light down on a rope first and then drop the camera in.Comment
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What is it, an old mine? Can't you actually get inside?Originally posted by minestrone View PostThought about going for the mini webcam but we want to use the pictures for printing and quality could be an issue. The cavity is massive and I mean the size of St Paul's cathedral massive so there really needs to be a decent amount of light.
d000hg> the pipe is man made and is about 15 meters long, thickness of a bottle of beer.Comment
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pretty much, the entry points are filled in, there is however a series of test holes over the site which we want to use.Originally posted by expat View PostWhat is it, an old mine? Can't you actually get inside?Comment
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You could even drop a flare down first if you really need a proper amount of light.Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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Na, it's filled with water mainly, just under 1 million tonnes of the stuff. That gives you an idea of the size if. The caverns are about 40 meters high.Originally posted by zeitghostThat'd be interesting if it's an old mine & full of gas...

Even a xenon flash is a bit doubtful under those circumstances...Comment
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At that size a cavern getting a picture from a small camera simply won't work, it won't have the focus and it would need to be very steady for a long enough exposure. You will need one hell of a good light source too a camera flash won't help much.Originally posted by minestrone View PostNa, it's filled with water mainly, just under 1 million tonnes of the stuff. That gives you an idea of the size if. The caverns are about 40 meters high.
I took a lot of pictures in large monuments over the summer and where there was only limited daylight the results were poor. In a totally black cavern with a relatively limited light source you're not going to get much if anything.
In the past when I used to be something of a spelunker some of my colleagues were keen photographers. They relied on looooong exposures and tripods or people lugging in what amounted to floodlights to get any pictures at all, caverns aren't easy to photograph.Comment
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That is my major worry, I was thinking that if I can get the ISO up to about 800 then that would solve the problem, the caverns wil range in size but we really don't know what is down there and the dimensions involved.Originally posted by TykeMerc View PostAt that size a cavern getting a picture from a small camera simply won't work, it won't have the focus and it would need to be very steady for a long enough exposure. You will need one hell of a good light source too a camera flash won't help much.
I took a lot of pictures in large monuments over the summer and where there was only limited daylight the results were poor. In a totally black cavern with a relatively limited light source you're not going to get much if anything.
In the past when I used to be something of a spelunker some of my colleagues were keen photographers. They relied on looooong exposures and tripods or people lugging in what amounted to floodlights to get any pictures at all, caverns aren't easy to photograph.
But then I don't know of many small cameras where you can modify the sensitivity, or one that will take an external flash which would help.
A flare has been mentioned as a second light source but I don't know where you buy them.Comment
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Even ISO800 isn't going to get you close.Originally posted by minestrone View PostThat is my major worry, I was thinking that if I can get the ISO up to about 800 then that would solve the problem, the caverns wil range in size but we really don't know what is down there and the dimensions involved.
But then I don't know of many small cameras where you can modify the sensitivity, or one that will take an external flash which would help.
A flare has been mentioned as a second light source but I don't know where you buy them.
Re: flash strengths - I have a top of the range Metz that, at full output, would only illuminate objects at 80' max on ISO3200 stock at 1/60th and f2.8. You might have more luck with infrared film and flash, but the easiest and cheapest way to capture a viable image in these circumstances would involve a long exposure with lighting. You'd need multiple, dispersed light sources to avoid massive shadows, and a secure mount for the camera.
As an example:
ISO800 at f2.8 would require a 15sec exposure at ev -6 (night, away from light pollution, starry sky).
Flares or halogen lighting would bring this up to ev-1 (dim artificial lighting in a large space), which would require ISO3200, f2.8 and 0.5 sec exposure.
Without lighting this really isn't feasible, as the ev would be sub -6.
For a 'normal' camera, like a disposable, you'd be looking at ISO800, f5.6 and a subsequent exposure of +4min (aprox) with flares/halogen. Approximate because exposure times over 10 seconds will encounter reciprocity law failure, where the relationship between aperture, speed and exposure starts to behave unpredictably, and colour & contrast tolerances will be outside the film stock's range.
I'd find the smallest second-hand camera I could with a bulb setting and the fastest lens possible, secure it to a rod, with a long cable-release mechanism, and try using high-rated films with flares dropped down other pipes into the cavern... I'd have to think a bit more on this - let me know what you're planning and I might be able to advise.Comment
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