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Here is a procedure to eliminate the camera's flexible neck. ...
@Lemosteam,Haha! I appreciate and thank you for your "complications." But, nah, I didn't miss your point. When I was assembling the car, I was conscious to the fact the the gimbal would hang down below the end of the car, which is the main reason that I did not use the 60' bulkhead flatcar and went with a much shorter scratchbuilt car, which would get that lens back closer to the centerline in curves. However, since I constructed that car, I can now see that the camera must be raised to get up to the engineer's height, that likely means that the gimbal will no longer interfere with the end of the car. If that's the case, I will likely consider rebuilding a slightly longer car that will allow placing the lens over the lead truck. It would also mean that I could put a coupler on both ends for some interesting shots from the rear of the train (with flat cars or gons in front of the "caboose," of course).So, it's still a work in progress. Stay tuned.Thanks,DFF
I'd cut up a locomotive and glue a hood to something beneath the camera gimbal for the engineer's perspective....?
By any chance is the lens a press fit? If you can move it slightly away from the sensor that would give you closer focus at the cost of focusing at infinity.
Mike, this is by no means negative waves from Moriarty, and you are soooo close IMHO both from a video quality and camera unit's perspective.Aaaaand here is comes...In the video the camera swings so far off track centerline, that I kinda lose interest. On the straights of course it looks great.A long flat car, with the camera just ahead of the lead truck bolster center, and slightly off center would put the lens in the vicinity of the engineer, IMO.This is what I keep waiting to see in these types of videos.Please don't hit me.
An additional thought remaining to be proven with a little math and engineering is to use a bit of mechanical trickery a la lever arms to aim the camera into the curve at a slightly greater rate than the front truck is sensing. This is how our minds anticipate changes in direction; we focus on what is about to happen as opposed to what is happening at that precise moment.
... it cannot be fully concealed in a typical N scale loco. The camera is plenty small, but the PC board is too large (too wide or too tall). ...
My immediate thinking is mounting the camera element on a pivot so it turns with the front truck, or even by itself on a single truck, depending on how flexible we can get with a modified umbilical to the CCD head.An additional thought remaining to be proven with a little math and engineering is to use a bit of mechanical trickery a la lever arms to aim the camera into the curve at a slightly greater rate than the front truck is sensing. This is how our minds anticipate changes in direction; we focus on what is about to happen as opposed to what is happening at that precise moment.