Mark Zaller
April 8th, 2009, 11:02 PM
Hello,
I would like help with a good cost effective way to video-record Aerial Fire Fighting. Missions are generally 4.5 hours long. A view out the front is needed when approaching the wildfire, and then out the side as we circle it. The result is desired on DVD.
Another plane already has a configuration of a Lipstick cam in the windshield and a camcorder out the right side. The two cameras feed in to a duplicate set of DVD recorders (for redundant backup) through a composite video switch. Only one camera at a time is recorded to both DVDs simultaneously. There is also a monitor for the pilot to look back at. This is a somewhat involved installation and maybe that is why only one pilot has it.
I’m wondering if a less expensive configuration could work almost as well: We already have a powerful Tablet PC on the lap of the right seat guy (Air Attack Group Supervisor). Could I simply hook several 640x480 webcams through a USB hub in to this tablet PC, and record low-qual mpeg to both the harddisk and integrated DVD drive? This would solve needing to install monitors, switches, extra power and so many wires.
Aircraft intercom and the 6 active radios also need to be recorded from a headset jack. Through a Beacktek box into a camcorder works fine, but for webcams is it possible to record line-in to the tablet PC’s and have it married to the webcam video?
I already have nice HD 1920x1080 camcorders (Pano SD100), but this is too much for firefighters to deal with and archive (maybe next year). They want the simplicity of rushing from the plane to pop a DVD into the fire base's player, and then keeping the disk for archive. Looking out the front window and then switching to the back is needed, and unfortunately just turning the lipstick cam in the front window isn’t working.
I’d appreciate ideas on good ways to do this, or different ways. Once a system works I will publish it on my website Aerial Fire Tech ?(Aerial Fire Tech)? (http://www.AerialFireTech.org) for other firefighters to use.
-MarkZ
I would like help with a good cost effective way to video-record Aerial Fire Fighting. Missions are generally 4.5 hours long. A view out the front is needed when approaching the wildfire, and then out the side as we circle it. The result is desired on DVD.
Another plane already has a configuration of a Lipstick cam in the windshield and a camcorder out the right side. The two cameras feed in to a duplicate set of DVD recorders (for redundant backup) through a composite video switch. Only one camera at a time is recorded to both DVDs simultaneously. There is also a monitor for the pilot to look back at. This is a somewhat involved installation and maybe that is why only one pilot has it.
I’m wondering if a less expensive configuration could work almost as well: We already have a powerful Tablet PC on the lap of the right seat guy (Air Attack Group Supervisor). Could I simply hook several 640x480 webcams through a USB hub in to this tablet PC, and record low-qual mpeg to both the harddisk and integrated DVD drive? This would solve needing to install monitors, switches, extra power and so many wires.
Aircraft intercom and the 6 active radios also need to be recorded from a headset jack. Through a Beacktek box into a camcorder works fine, but for webcams is it possible to record line-in to the tablet PC’s and have it married to the webcam video?
I already have nice HD 1920x1080 camcorders (Pano SD100), but this is too much for firefighters to deal with and archive (maybe next year). They want the simplicity of rushing from the plane to pop a DVD into the fire base's player, and then keeping the disk for archive. Looking out the front window and then switching to the back is needed, and unfortunately just turning the lipstick cam in the front window isn’t working.
I’d appreciate ideas on good ways to do this, or different ways. Once a system works I will publish it on my website Aerial Fire Tech ?(Aerial Fire Tech)? (http://www.AerialFireTech.org) for other firefighters to use.
-MarkZ