View Full Version : Rai & Markus' "Drake" HD camera


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Jason Rodriguez
November 1st, 2004, 03:39 PM
Okay, here's a color-corrected image.

Not too great in that increasing the saturation brought out a lot of artifacting, banding, and color-abberations in the highlights.

From my limited experience with Micron, Altasens, and FillFactory, it seems that "low" color is a problem with the Fillfactory IBIS chip, not full-frame shutter modes.

This was done with Color Finesse from Synthetic Aperture, so it's running at 32-bits-per-channel floating point color space for very high-quality results. Nice thing is it comes with After Effects 6.5 now :)

http://home.mindspring.com/~jrod/kopf2_16bit_1080p.jpg

BTW though, your blow-up to 1080p looks really good, IIRC, the IBIS is only 1280x720.

Brad Abrahams
November 1st, 2004, 03:40 PM
Markus, I noticed the tif you linked to is actually 8 bit, not 16 as the filename would suggest.

Markus Rupprecht
November 1st, 2004, 04:21 PM
thanks Jason. That's quite a big pot of color. "shutter" was propably to unpresize. It's more readout speed that influences the outcome. And I'm still refering to the IBIS 5, can't tell how the Altasens compares too it right now.
I will do a perfectly lit sunshine shot with lots of color in the scene for comparison. And some greenscreen shots should also be interesting.

Aaron Shaw
November 1st, 2004, 04:34 PM
I'd love to see a greenscreen shot!

How close is everyone to having a beta model?

Also, a question concerning bayer patterns:

How exactly is this implemented? It seems from the discussion here that it can be done with software but I honestly don't understand how that would work. Wouldn't it require a physical filter for each pixel to work? If you can do it all via software shouldn't there be a way to reconstruct a full RGB channel instead?

Rob Lohman
November 2nd, 2004, 06:17 AM
This thread originally was part of a much larger thread to build
our own HD camera's. For various reasons it has been split off
into its own thread. Please keep in mind that some of the earlier
conversations (up to this point) may read a bit strange due to
this split (some parts may exist in the old thread, etc.). You can
find the old thread in the following place:

http://www.dvinfo.net/conf/showthread.php?s=&threadid=25808

Thank you for your consideration, back to our regular broadcast!

Zac Stein
November 2nd, 2004, 08:27 AM
Let me just say, i have money sitting right here if a varient of this camera ever comes up for sale, i would love to help support you guys and also have access to such a wonderful looking machine.

If i can help in anyway, well if i can, don't hesitate to ask.

Zac

Obin Olson
November 3rd, 2004, 01:20 PM
I see you guys are playing with the IBIS5...I guess that chip would work well for a "look" as the color is so low ...still stuff looks great guys! got any pics of the "camera"??

Anhar Miah
November 4th, 2004, 06:49 PM
Wow, this is really amazing stuffm BUT....

I'm starting to wonder, this is beyond most peoples grasp, i mean it took experts(s) and month(s) and lots of money and god only knows how much dedication to get to where you got.

So i give congrats to you guys, great work.

However I was just wondering for the rest of us (no-so techincal experts) if the proposed 24P 1080P 3CCD JVC HDV 2/3" $20k may just be THE indie HD cam?
It may turn out to be less than $20K, and may even have 50Mb/s i.e. double current HDV rates recording onto full size DV tapes.

I know it wont be uncompressed, but heck if people can watch miniDV blown up then this options gotter be a great deal better?

Ooops, maybe i shouldnt have spoken out aloud...................................... now i gonna get grilled :)

Aaron Shaw
November 4th, 2004, 07:09 PM
You make a very good point Anhar. Very good indeed.

I honestly don't think that very many people are going to need 4:4:4 footage. I can see using it for chroma-keying but beyond that it seems like a waste of storage space and bandwidth. Now, I'm not sure that I like the idea of HDV even at 50mbs.... Is 50mb/s 4:2:2 footage then?


As we continue producing our own cams why not have an option to shoot 4:2:2 and 4:4:4 switchable? No one will be able to tell that you shot 4:2:2 as compared with 4:4:4 save for special effects and you will plenty of money in storage space and processing power.

Richard Mellor
November 5th, 2004, 07:32 AM
well I think a lot of the camera projects look like they will be under
$7,000. that looks like the real indie camera . all the work done on mini dv ,the challange has been to get people to take your project seriously, hi def with viper raw footage. I think will do that.

Zac Stein
November 5th, 2004, 07:38 AM
I am hoping some varying configs may be available.

I have no need for a 17" viewfinder... i think 7" would be fine for me.

Certain things, as long as the image quality is the same... i wouldn't mind something of trimmed down.

And anyways, i dunno if i can afford something that is 7k USD.

Even though that is cheap, that is not so cheap for private ownership!!!

I am hoping that eventually a sensor can be found that is the full 35mm plane... that would be fantastic... could utilise all my slr lenses and the like.

We will see what is available and so on, i would much rather support people out there like me, than marketing departments for big companies.

Zac

Markus Rupprecht
November 5th, 2004, 09:00 AM
It sounds absurd. But compressing is acutally a tougher task than recording uncompressed. Something must be in place to do the compression. That means computing power...
We started with a HDV camera (the small JVC one) and the format is just not good enough for professional tasks. MPEG 2 at this dararate gives you a hard time in post. Alter the contrasts just a little bit and the compression artefacts show up. To edit this means to reencode. You have all sorts of cascading effects with compression. MPEG really is a special thing. It's a new information to me that the new JVC 3chip HDV camera will record at double data rate. That could be usable...

And shure the first question you need to ask yourself before you spent money and time and dedication to seomething is: what do you want. Scince this thread was split of to collect posts regarding our camera project I can tell, that what we want is a digital camera, that does pictures that can be screened at regular theaters after being put to regular 35mm film and look as close as possible like 35mm film.

Or in other words: make high budget production value possible with indie / low budget resources.

It's not only possibilities in post. It's also the film camera like shutter speed with the motion blur effects you have , especially in action sequences. DOF issues and the possibiliy to treat the picture in a way that it doesn't look like video at all.
I'm not impressed by the viper picture. The data richness is incredible, chroma levels and so on. But just looking at still images... The picture details and the feeling of it does not remind me of cinema but of video.

I don't know. But from an artistic point of view that's not sattisfying.

@Zac
To work with a 17" viewfinder is something you have to get used to. But once you find the workflow, you don't want to miss it. I'll shoot a video soon, showing the features of the camera. Having such a big screen helps a lot to compose your pictures. By the way much smaller displays that can do the full HD res are much more expensive. I saw HD viewfinders for more than 15.000 ...

Zac Stein
November 5th, 2004, 09:17 AM
Markus i sure can understand how cool that would be, but is it actually needed for a full rez output while shooting, wouldn't even at half rez, on a screen that is 7", show enough detail.

Well i dunno, i would love this rig in shape and form.

I have a friend who works doing canon pro camera repairs, gonna see if he can source me out some of their full size sensors and see if you guys can have a play with it :)


Drop me an email if u wanna talk about it further.

Zac

Donal Briard
November 5th, 2004, 03:59 PM
<<<-- Originally posted by Anhar Miah : Wow, this is really amazing stuffm BUT....

I'm starting to wonder, this is beyond most peoples grasp, i mean it took experts(s) and month(s) and lots of money and god only knows how much dedication to get to where you got.

So i give congrats to you guys, great work.

However I was just wondering for the rest of us (no-so techincal experts) if the proposed 24P 1080P 3CCD JVC HDV 2/3" $20k may just be THE indie HD cam?
It may turn out to be less than $20K, and may even have 50Mb/s i.e. double current HDV rates recording onto full size DV tapes.

I know it wont be uncompressed, but heck if people can watch miniDV blown up then this options gotter be a great deal better?

Ooops, maybe i shouldnt have spoken out aloud...................................... now i gonna get grilled :) -->>>

Where did you get that information from? 24p, 1080p, 50mb... All of that is not HDV standard and I can't find any info anywhere on this?

Markus Rupprecht
November 5th, 2004, 04:32 PM
@Zac

A view words about the "viewfinder" thing. I've used the small LCD screens with DV cameras scince they are available and find them usefull. I shot with the Sony DSR 200 for a while. That's the only "pro" camera I had in my hands both utilizing a good viewfinder (b&w tube) and a color LCD screen.
I used it a lot, even though it fooled me often and showed me a much better picture than I actually got.

Now with HD resolution viewfinders are a different issue. HD resolution tubes in viewfinder size as well as LCD screens are possible and available - but the price is out of discussion.

So we did it the russian way, sat down and looked around what is available for reasonable prices, that can show us the HD image in full res and can be mounted to the camera.

We did this thinking while we experimented with a box camera / laptop setup and the laptop display, even though really weak in daylight proofed usefull.
When we came across this 17" LCD monitor, tripple as bright as "normal" screens and pretty light too (about 3 kilogram) we tried it out.

First we put the preview window in full resolution on it. On a 17" monitor, that's really big. You see everything. Every detail, every small shadow or clipped white spot. We made it turnable, so when working with the actors I could turn the screen around and discuss positions and found that it's much easier to discuss "why should we do that in this way for the camera issues". Otherwise it's better not to show the actors the camera picture but for those situations it helped in comunication a lot.

LCD screens have a problem that with a changing viewing angle the picture looks different. Hard for defining the aperture or light issues. Especialy when you do crane moves or pans and you can not exactly stay in the best viewing angle. So we added a histogram display. That shows you (like in photoshop) the picture information in curves. It has a white one for the luminance, you see if there are too many shadows, if the entire picture is too low lit and so on and it has curves for each color. So you can see how much color information is seen for real by the chip. Together thats a really usefull feature.
Then we put other status displays and the entire GUI on that screen. You can change to playback mode, look at or search for recorded shots, get and manipulate all kinds of setups - in a size you can operate it with 2 or 3 people in front of it easily. You can't do it with a small display or you need a external screen. So cameraman and assistant can use it and the director can stand behind and also watch what he gets. Much, much better than this small watchman thingies. Sony already hates us, so what. Vaio is great though, got a Vaio laptop.

Anyway. We tried a smaller screen afterwards. And it was not the same. I got so used to the workflow, to see all details when shooting that I find it hard to get back to something like a viewfinder... Try it out. Start a DVD on your laptop and ask yourself - why not this quality for a viewfinder.

Eric Gorski
November 5th, 2004, 04:40 PM
please, please, please, oh please markus... post i picture of your camera!

Wayne Morellini
November 6th, 2004, 02:27 AM
Anhar, most camera systems here are developed from ready made parts, it is the cinema specific capture software that takes the most amount of time. With the Drake, I'm not sure whst they did in the end in respect of this formular, I expect we shall see soon on the new website.

The continuing saga of the JVC HD ENG camera. One reason I am here is that JVC went upmarket (actually middle market) with their HDV camera. Originally it was something like $27K, way above the $7K of the 5000, just toomuch of a jump so I jumped. $10-15K was the limit for a JVC.

The issues of data rate has been discussed before.

But with minidv what they do for cinema, is film it right, do lots of processing to get rid of codec/interlacing artifacts, estimate missing detail, and make it look right, and do resolution upscaling. If you just use a projector or HD TV (or some large SD TV's like what Philips does), it may have a simplified version of this correcting/upscalling that is why they look better sometimes. There is one film transfer company I saw that would do this and colourisation for around $30K an hour (maybe it was cheaper). Once you go above 50MB/s in SD, the results start getting visually indistinguishable. Actually I don't like the look of the Minidv upscaled I've seen, I would rather upsacle 1080p to SHD resolution and screen that.

Donal, the 50Mb/s Mpeg2 is from the figurative HDV2 spec (but I think it has something to do with the Blue ray disk). As predicted this is the minium for good Eng work.

Raw is good for special effects and if you got the budget for it (but that's what we are stuck with, as Markus said we need extra processing for anythign else at the moment. Lossless saves a bit of space (around half to one third for a good codec).

For everything else we could use visually Lossless as used in cineform codec (David Newman has been here from them they even have introduced a suitable codec for bayer that does 4:1). Their normal codec does vissually lossless from 6:1 to 10:1 3chip footage. It is able to maintain integrity over many editing generations.

Now apart from this there is an open Avid HD codec that goes upto 220MB/s??, and who ever else.

So between all these we have a good selection to support for different work. In the other projects we were looking at slotting in any software codec the user wanted (given the eventual computing power).

Markus:

On Displays. Sometime ago I sent Rai information about a laptop that did 720p, the screen was high contrast, sharp, crystal clear and wide angle, simply much better than the others I saw around it, and more like modern LCD TV's. So shortly many more laptops and even tablet PC's (ideal for your application) should have this technology. On the other thread they have looked at the emagin OEL veiwfinder, it is HD and $1600, small inbuilt VGA type circuit, that is a bit cheaper. The truth is that eventual production costs of these LCD on silicon is extremely low in bulk, but they want to make big money. I have done much reserach before and had many links, there are too mmany competing companies. So realistically a mass produced HD item might be available for $200 and less eventually (but this could take between 1 and 5 years of competition).

Wayne.

Rob Lohman
November 8th, 2004, 03:38 AM
Markus & Rai: are you guys gonna reveal how your camera works?
Like are you using PC components, if so with what operating
system and things like that?

Anhar Miah
November 11th, 2004, 06:51 PM
Rai & Markus, can you give us any more information about the 35mm cmos project (even some tiny snippet?)

All of these stuff is making my head spin, soo much going on!!

I know this is long away, but if say (hopefully) you complete this 35mm cmos project would you consider selling as a complete product? if so any idea how much? (even a wild guess).

thanks!

Obin Olson
November 11th, 2004, 11:21 PM
Anhar take a look at my thread 4:4:4 10bit ..I have made a breakthrough with capture at 1080P 4:4:4 10/8bit 24fps

Markus Rupprecht
November 16th, 2004, 10:43 AM
I need to be brief, tight schedule.
@Rob
Inside the camera are many components we bought after a long experimental and hand selecting process. But we can't offer a step by step do it yourself tutorial. So, yeah, there are PC components and circuit boards of this and that brand. Thing is, the camera has a button. When you hit it, the camera needs five seconds and is turned on, when you hit it again, you turn it off. It doesn't make noise and when there is a new software update you put a USB stick in and the camera updates itself. Just describing this little two mechanisms in detail: single button for turning on/off and software update I could fill 25 pages with. And this is the case for any feature, any solved problem.
All I can ask for is patience, until we have time to organize the "possible" informations on a webpage and do some video clips.

Despite the limits of the chip we incorporated we managed it to define a "look". Drake as a system has a different look to cinealta, varicam or viper. That's the important thing to us. We will build Drakes for fellow filmmakers and also rent them for fair money. We will use it, get more experience, make it better. Who can tell what sensors are available in 2 years.

@Anhar
even though we are experimenting and getting experiences with big sensors that won't lead to a Mama Drake cam right away. I consider a camera something you can mount on a tripod and shoot a long film with. The piles of data you get with higher resolution and higher bit depth are just a little too much for todays processors and hard drives... if limited money is of some importance to you. It is to us, so we expect, that within 2 years that will come to indie budget reach. By then we will have a working camera, incoporating what is possible in a usable sense, by then. I'll post clips when we are done :) until then, lets start to use what we have and I can't wait to see what people shoot with the little sister drakes in a short while...

@Obin
cool, post some clips

Jim Exton
November 16th, 2004, 10:58 AM
When will the little sister drakes be available and roughly how much money?

I am seriously interested in one.

Joshua Starnes
November 16th, 2004, 11:41 AM
I'm also interested.

Rob Lohman
November 17th, 2004, 05:17 AM
Markus: I understand all of what you are saying and I can assure
you know one is looking for tutorials, more like:

- the camera runs windows or linux or a custom OS for example
- it runs on a standard mainboard with pentium 4 or a custom FPGA chip for example

Things like that. Since you obviously have a camera that works
it would be interesting to see which base components you guys
used to get it off the ground.

Anyway, I'm also quite interested especially in renting in due time.
Heck, I ain't that far away from you guys!

Rai Orz
November 17th, 2004, 07:18 AM
Rob, you talk about inside parts. We talk about DRAKE. And DRAKE is a SYSTEM, not only a camera.

This SYSTEM is a powerful tool to shoot movies. Its not only a sensor with some hard- and software to write RAW files to HDD.
DRAKE have a differnt and more flexibly design compared with all existing cameras. So the system cames with spezial software, spezial case design, spezial mount supports, spezial lenses, spezial focus drives, spezial accessories, etc. You must see the whole system.

Therefore we decided that we will presentation the whole DRAKE SYSTEM, not only parts (not yet). Those presentation cost some days, but compared with other announcements (like the JVC Altasens) it will come very fast.

Wayne Morellini
November 17th, 2004, 07:42 AM
Thanks, the spezial's say a lot about cinema features and design commitment. I think what people are after is a brief Features/Specifications summary page, like many product marketing brochures do (and Rob says "No, no, more, more! ;).

Obin Olson
November 17th, 2004, 07:53 AM
@Markus:
The piles of data you get with higher resolution and higher bit depth are just a little too much for todays processors and hard drives...

Not really I will be recording 12bit 1920x1080 images at 24fps

markus I would not make a product that is 8bit. It's not good enough for post work

Wayne Morellini
November 17th, 2004, 08:05 AM
I agree, unless you want a small low power or one drive camera 1080p is totally possible.

Rob Lohman
November 17th, 2004, 08:36 AM
Rai: I know it is. Okay, if that's the way you guys want to do this
then we'll have to wait I guess. Good luck.

Rai Orz
November 17th, 2004, 09:03 AM
@Obin:
by sure, Markus team do enough tests with post work.
Drake have some spezial things, started with white balance (why we need 2 Bits more, if we kill this for white balace in the post?)over look up table for convert down to 8Bit to some others, so at the end, DRAKEs 8Bit writing to only one HDD is optimal.
A engeneer may see first the datas. Artists see also the result.

What Markus said about todays (PC) processors is this: You can´t find a system without noise (from coolers) and also only low power need. And they don´t like swaping HDDs every few minutes.

BTW: If you like start a game: Lets do this: Who can record first, 1920x1080, 24fps, 36Bit. All parts, in a portable camera case, low power, no noise, battery.
... and scameramans fan: swaping HDDs each 4 minutes

Wayne Morellini
November 17th, 2004, 09:33 AM
I can say this, 35mm film cameras can be big, Rolls of film are big. So in comparison 4 drive (cheap drives in Raid to save money and increase capacity) canbe smaller and tripod mounted, and the drives be smaller than a roll of film.

What you are facing is cooling technique problems. For my Case ideas I was looking at an almost completely silent passive cooling (well possibly completely) technique with added unique features. Very patentable stuff. But if you look around you should be able to find and implement existing passive cooling techniques. The second problem is peak efficiency, which means in hot places like where I live you will need much more efficency then in Germany. So you have to get processing power under a certain heat disapation per GHZ. This means single or multicore, Pent M and VIA processors, and using a good onbaord GPU and DSP's (every trick in the book). Then also lower powered lower speed memory (memory aren't the major speed restriction). Drives, well if you use an extra drive on cheap array you can use lower powered higher capacity drives, so now they last 4 times longer per drive *2+ drives. But you get the picture on how to shoe horn in a system. Now using best programming practices (and realtime OS or stripped realtime Linux witrh Machine code extensions) maybe you also halve the proccessing power needed.


So if Markus looks at what the average PC does it may look impossible, but if you look at what the best can do it is.

Régine Weinberg
November 18th, 2004, 05:22 AM
Hm
good morning, a bit late okay
go back 20 years and there you have all you need
it was used by STAX for their Class A amps, fantastic sound still today, called "heat pipe" no noise at all, it is heavily used by radio amteurs and works

no problems only solulutions

Jason Rodriguez
November 18th, 2004, 01:17 PM
Four Fujistu 5400RPM 2.5" SATA drives can sustain over 100MB/s. The new Seagate 7200.1 Momentus drives (2.5" SATA) in a four drive RAID can sustain over 120MB/s. They also go up to 100GB each, and four of them will fit in the same space as a single 3.5" drive.

The Fujitsu's are available now. The Seagates in 1Q05. Combind that with a SATA RAID card or the 4 sata ports on a 915 chipset (and the 915GM when it ships in January, also called "Alviso" that'll use the lower-powered Pentium M), and you've got a ton of throughput without a lot of heat, wattage, etc.

If you're doing things right, you don't need to have four 10K drives gobbling up 50W of power to get the throughput you need.

Jason Rodriguez
November 18th, 2004, 01:25 PM
BTW: If you like start a game: Lets do this: Who can record first, 1920x1080, 24fps, 36Bit. All parts, in a portable camera case, low power, no noise, battery.
... and scameramans fan: swaping HDDs each 4 minutesOkay, the parts aren't there RIGHT NOW.

And you have a point there, your DRAKE system is working an functional right now. But in a couple months, you'll have a quiet (film cameras aren't completely quite BTW) camera system based on the Pentium M and the 915GM chipset with four small 2.5" SATA drives for recording. It won't take loud fans to keep it cool, etc., it'll be the perfect package that your looking for.

But honestly you probably won't be able to build something like that till next summer. But it'll be here, and it's coming pretty fast.

In the meantime you have a working system, but if you only have on shot at this (and not unlimited funds to keep spending on developing camera systems), then a couple months of waiting will give you a great chip in the Altasens-based cameras, and a quiet recorder that's SATA and Pentium-M based.

Rai Orz
November 18th, 2004, 03:46 PM
Jason, this thread is for DRAKE. And DRAKE work with only one HDD.
Let me say only one thing: Be sure, we know what is possible. And if you can read between the lines, you maybe know what you will find some day from us.

But now lets talk about DRAKE. Tomorrow we will have a final product design meeting. As we said it, it is a whole SYSTEM, not only a camera. I´m sure we talk also about things we can say here before the web side is ready

Gary McClurg
November 18th, 2004, 05:36 PM
So is the web site going to be up tomorrow or the camera is going to be ready?

Michael Struthers
November 18th, 2004, 05:53 PM
All this talk and not one pic of the camera. Don't know if I believe it.

As Elvis says:

"A little less conversation, and a little more action"

Rai Orz
November 19th, 2004, 02:29 AM
@Gary and @Michael:

The camera is ready. Markus continue shoot his movie with it. You saw first clips here.

But today we will talk about last changes in case and accessories design, because most mechanics parts are made by hand, whithout CNC. To start (and optimize) serial production, we must change some part design (only for part production, not for function). On the other hand, we will talk today about a main question: What parts and accessories will be included, and whats optional.

Wayne Morellini
November 19th, 2004, 05:54 AM
<<<-- Originally posted by Ronald Biese :
no problems only solulutions -->>>

Glad to hear it, I often find too many people without solutions.

Jason nice solution, I wonder if the next lot of 50MB's 3.5 inch drives are going to improve the situation.

Wayne Morellini
November 19th, 2004, 05:57 AM
Well, I'm going to read between the lines (well speculate at least). If your camera has much more than a sensor (cases, controls, and adaptor), then it would be good if you could upgrade to 1080 by replacing sensor and drives.

Thanks

Wayne.

Rai Orz
November 24th, 2004, 10:31 AM
Short news about DRAKE:

Timeline for presentation the whole system will be the 12.14.2004.

Nick V. Bicanic
November 27th, 2004, 04:27 AM
I've been following this thread (and obin's) on and off since they started (mostly lurking) and it prompted us to move towards productising a high speed digital HD solution.

A number of HD projects (full length feature films low, medium and high budget) that shoot in our area all have to hire film equipment to shoot off-speed stuff (usually meaning more than 60fps)...

so we decided to help build something that does exactly that...

I am as keen as many others to see the "drake" (cool name btw) - I love the idea of people building high end stuff like this themselves.

Our aim is to satisfy a niche for people who shoot HD quality stuff but we want to intercut it with Varicam/F900/Viper footage - rather than shooting the whole thing on the one camera - since I'm sceptical as to how "production-friendly" shooting everything digitally would be - in my experience a lot of the people on the scene (sound/post/video/camera op etc etc) are fairly old school and don't find it that easy to adjust to new stuff...

I have started another thread with some samples of our stuff...I apologise for posting to this one aswell - I just figured it was a worthwhile subject matter to add to the debate.

nick

Wayne Morellini
November 28th, 2004, 08:34 AM
<<<-- Originally posted by Rai Orz : Short news about DRAKE:

Timeline for presentation the whole system will be the 12.14.2004. -->>>

Yes...


Nick, good on you, their have been people complaining about his lack for a while.


About workflow on one camera, If it's low budget and the old timers have trouble adjusting, why not try to give a good young timer a break (with a bit of sup of course).

Nick V. Bicanic
November 28th, 2004, 05:54 PM
I'm a young timer myself - if you look me up on imdb you'll see there's like 2 and a half credits only - so yeah I don't have any issues with people learning new skills...I just figure that the large part of the "market" - meaning people who would pay good cash to rent this stuff (the higher budget the better) are still using old school crew...

Nick

Juan M. M. Fiebelkorn
November 28th, 2004, 11:32 PM
Yes, Nick you are on the right path.
Cine people hate video most of the times, and this doesn't apply only to the "oldies"......
Guys, think about it this way: Cine workflow has being working with not so big variations for more than a century..
More than a hundred years of experience all over the world would be difficult to defeat with a whole new way of doing things...
If it werent this way cars would be very different from what we have right now, isn't it?

Nick V. Bicanic
November 29th, 2004, 01:28 AM
I look forward to the color camera tests (coming 2nd week december) - we will also be doing some matching tests all the way through to 35mm filmout with multiple film stocks...

will post all the results here...

Nick

Wayne Morellini
November 29th, 2004, 04:27 AM
A totally new way would overwhelm the traditionalist within a decade or so, as younger, or wiser heads, stampede to use it. Of course nobody here has a totally new way here yet. We still have a lense system to a projection plane on a tripod dolly etc, recording to a new media. Backend we have more progress, but still a series of images sliced together, even big movies are using digitsed frames on a NLE now. So all they are doing is moving their skills to the topend of the industry. This is only another opinion of course. One thing somebody once told me about computers, is that people resist cahnge until the benefits are approximately 10 times more, then they suddenly swap over. So basically, if we can make he benefis 10 times more (financially, stress, marketing (like 3D animation does) etc, we can get the sudden rush.

Cars are radically different from the first cars, they just don't fly, run or hop ;)

Nick V. Bicanic
November 29th, 2004, 04:47 AM
which I totally didn't mean to...
but there's a cool book called Digital illusion (by Dodsworth) that I read a while back...

It talks about the dreaded "interactive entertainment" and what that implies for mass spaces (i.e. cinemas and amusement parks)

I actually think some of that stuff is totally legit - and am happy to be on the tech end moving into old-school cinema territory as opposed to the other way around...since that method is nearly impossible (resisting change is endemic to it - in my case - and many others on this board - wayne I assume included - we embrace it)

so long as we don't lose track of story we're doing and will win in the long run...

my car doesn't fly at all - but it does crush other things with it's 33inch wheels (and 9 inch suspension lift)

nick

Rai Orz
November 29th, 2004, 05:20 AM
Cars and cameras. Its nice to read...
The point is what Juan said: Cine people hate video..., and this doesnt apply only to the "oldies"..... I hate it too.
And cars? I, for my person, love olditimer. I hate new cars (new cars = video?)... But i love the new ARRI D20 and i love DRAKE too.
I like to talk about those stuff, but please, please not here.

1000fps, yes we also made tests with differnt high speed sensors, with little bit less fps, but with full 1280x720.
Nick, your clips look also like made with the MICRON CMOS Sensor MT9M413.
If everyone need high speed, Drake have a changeble camerahead, so its ready for differnt camera heads. Its only a question of $$$.

BTW. Look at the german WEINBERGER speed camera
http://www.cine-speedcam.com/

or a "low cost" camera (Low cost with "")
http://www.baslerweb.com/produkte/produkte_en_212.php

John Nagle
November 29th, 2004, 06:39 AM
Rai,

About how much is the Basler you posted the link to?