25th October 2007
Please excuse the size of these, when they are in Quick Time or Flash format, they will be less than 300kb or so each for the same size movie.
Give them time to load up, as the image will jump until fully loaded
Clock to show the second hand not moving. 2.79mb
The time difference is actually about 50 nano seconds between each image, a nano second is 0.000000001 or one billionth of a second.
Scamps (my dog) jumping off the sofa. 2.01mb
The cameras were set to 0.3 seconds exposure, and there was a time difference between each image of 0.050 seconds, so as the last was being taken the first shutter was still open.
Litsa jumping onto the sofa, to test the time differences. 2.60mb
Litsa jumped on the sofa and was really roughing up scamps in this one, the setting were set to 0.010 between each image, so apart from her arm that has a slight blur towards the end, even her movement at the speed of jumping, landing and messing with the dog at the same time, shows very little movement at all. I tried this same shot with the cameras set to instant, so there was no time difference at all, and there is zero difference between each image apart form the obvious position of the camera.
Litsa dropping a packet of rice on the floor. 3.41mb
I wanted to see how even the images were, on a constant moving object, so litsa held a bag of rice and dropped it onto the floor. You can see the images are very even and gradual, the bag is evenly spaced on each image, and apart from the blur due to longer exposure times (as i have no photography lighting in the flat at the moment).



