Cheap, reliable aerial photography?

Y

yutzey

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I'm fairly new here, so please be gentle ;)

How many times have you wished you could have a recent aerial photograph of the area you're exploring? I just learned that my digital camera (HP PhotoSmart 618) has a time lapse function. It can take pictures as frequently as once ever 15 seconds. I got to thinking I could attach it to the end of a telescoping rod, like the kind they use for a pool or to change light bulbs on tall ceilings. Maybe even a weather balloon. ??? Something to get it high enough to peer over the surrounding trees and buildings. Hoist it up and hold it up there to take a couple shots, then download them to the laptop. Then review for potential hot spots. I haven't tried it yet, but don't see any reason why it wouldn't work. Has this been discussed before? Has anyone tried anything like this? Thanks!
 

Never tried it, but I'm not gonna make fun of you for the idea - many of the most creative and ingenious of people are those who can "think outside of the box" so to speak.

Only thing I'd be worried about is the camera getting broken somehow.

If you try it, post your results - I'd be curious.
 

Sounds good to me. A recent photo could help. Google, World Wind and Terra Client are good in some areas. They all show a 40 acre field across the road from my house in 2004. The houses were built in 2002....Art
 

af1733 said:
Have you taken a look at Google Earth?

Yes, I use google earth quite frequently. I figure this way I could get a closer, more recent look.


Cool idea about the airplanes / blimps!
 

Actually you can buy a rocket that has a built in camera. After it ejects the parachute it starts the camera function, and it takes a bunch of pictures on a time lapse of like every 2 seconds or something.
Should still be able to pick them up from Wal Mart for like $20 or $30.
 

A good Duck,long twine and duct tape might be cheaper ...duct tape camera to duck....tie twine around its leg ....send it up...say cheese! :)



I know ....Rule 2# :D :D
 

Yep, thats just great Gypsy >:( I just lost my camera, my dinner and a perfectly good spool of twine trying that! For anyone else: remember to tie the other end of the twine to something! :D But seriously, Yutzey, I'd say give it a shot!
 

nhbenz said:
Yep, thats just great Gypsy >:( I just lost my camera, my dinner and a perfectly good spool of twine trying that! For anyone else: remember to tie the other end of the twine to something! :D But seriously, Yutzey, I'd say give it a shot!

ROFLMAO!!! :D :D :D
 

Check with the local government offices. They might have aerial photography you could look at and some of it might not be recent.
 

Many Dept of Natural Resources agencies at the state level have online aerial
pictures. Another source is state wildlife/park management websites/agencies.

The federal Dept of Natural Resources has a website to view aerial photos
http://nmviewogc.cr.usgs.gov/viewer.htm
 

I have two suggestions. The first is to find out who your county GIS supervisor is and then go talk to him. Most counties now have this position and are putting all of their tax data into a GIS database. My county flew arial photography over the entire county at six inch resolution. You may have to go talk to you local county board of supervisors to request this data. The second suggestion was mentioned in an earlier reply. Buy a remote controlled airplane. One of my co-workers bought several identical remote controlled airplanes and several identical digital cameras. He sets the camera up to take pictures at a regular interval and then flies the plane over the entire site of interest. Then he makes a photo montaj of all of the pictures. They look pretty good, now they won't be rectified so you can't use them in a GIS program but you can have a nice high resolution photo.
 

Actually you can buy a rocket that has a built in camera. After it ejects the parachute it starts the camera function, and it takes a bunch of pictures on a time lapse of like every 2 seconds or something.
Should still be able to pick them up from Wal Mart for like $20 or $30.
If you want to spend a little more....get a wireless video camera (pinhole spy camera). You can buy model rockets that have payloads specifically for cameras. Hook the camera reciever up to a tv/vcr combo (ok...need a power source) and record during lift off. That way, you're assured of getting your area, and not the 40 acres downwind. The cameras have a pretty good range....up to 1000 ft. line-of-site. I had one mounted to an RC truck and drove it all over the yard....while I sat in the livingroom in front of the TV.
 

yutzey said:
I'm fairly new here, so please be gentle ;)

How many times have you wished you could have a recent aerial photograph of the area you're exploring? I just learned that my digital camera (HP PhotoSmart 618) has a time lapse function. It can take pictures as frequently as once ever 15 seconds. I got to thinking I could attach it to the end of a telescoping rod, like the kind they use for a pool or to change light bulbs on tall ceilings. Maybe even a weather balloon. ??? Something to get it high enough to peer over the surrounding trees and buildings. Hoist it up and hold it up there to take a couple shots, then download them to the laptop. Then review for potential hot spots.

If your looking for "hot spots" literally, then consider infrared. I posted several links on DIY (do it yourself) camera conversions in another thread, (see link below).

I haven't tried it yet, but don't see any reason why it wouldn't work. Has this been discussed before? Has anyone tried anything like this? Thanks!

I was thinking of doing the RC plane thing like others have suggested, using a modified infrared camera. I have to wait until the weather warms up before I take the trip to my destination spot and I actually consider doing any digging.

F.
Link: http://forum.treasurenet.com/index.php/topic,68167.0.html
 

We have a small airport that offers rides for several dollars, if you took along a camera you could get all kinds of pictures in a 30 minute ride. m2cw
 

You couldn't get the camera up by hand in 15 seconds with a pole long enough to be worthwhile. (That, and you couldn't lift a pole strong enough to support the camera and it's own weight that is over 40 feet or so).

How about the Estes rocket-launched camera? They now have a small digital model that will get you to 1,000 feet or so. Problem with rockets and R/C airplanes is you need a clear spot to lend them. I have a HP 618 (and fly R/C) and you're going to need 400 ft of runway to lift it unless you go big $$$ and long learnng to get into helicopters.

Here's one for $15.19 that uses 110 film (24 exposures/roll)

http://www2.towerhobbies.com/cgi-bin/wti0001p?&I=LXHFJ2&P=0

$30 for the launcher and rocket

http://www2.towerhobbies.com/cgi-bin/wti0001p?&I=LXFKS3&P=SM

This one takes video from 150 to 1,350 ft - $137.

http://www.apogeerockets.com/Estes_Oracle_Video_Rocket.asp

Estes_Oracle.jpg


Oracle_plug-in.jpg
 

I had an old gas powered model airplane that we put a digital camera in. with the 1Gb memory card it toik several minutes of footage. we flew it around my parent's house to get some arial shots... Worked great until the third run... when we crashed it into a tree.
 

little off subject here but, I use to be able to get into maps and zoom close enough to tell the make of cars in parking lots. Now the closest I can zoom is making out roof tops or maybe spots in the parking lot. Someone was telling me since 9/11 the up close zooms are no more. Is this true or is there a site that has great zoom?(even if it requires you to pay)
 

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