Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/11/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hello all. Long time no see. I've been wanting an infra red trigger to go with my R system for ages, to catch birds in flight, foxes returning to the den with dinner, deer arriving at a wallow, that sort of thing. So I drew up a circuit design, researched the wiring of the R8's motor drive and winder, analysed the market for industrial IR sensors, bought a few hundred meters of cable and did a lot of soldering. And last night I finished the job, though I've been out using the incomplete prototype the last two weekends. The system features two sensors, an emitter and receiver, the later sending a signal to the camera in less than a millisecond once the infra red beam is broken. I've wired in a kill switch so I can manually stop the sensor from telling the camera to take pictures should a wombat stagger into the scene (though single shot with the motor drive is good - takes only one shot per beam-break). And I've made an extension for the R8 remote control which is wired in parallel with the sensor so that I can trigger the camera (or just the mirror pre-release) at any time, as well as see what its settings are. The cables are long enough for me to position the sensors 20 meters apart, with the camera 20 meters from the IR beam, and with me and the controls another 100 meters away, sitting under a bush or in a hide. All run from a small rechargeable 12V sealed lead acid battery. I'd be happy to help anyone on the LUG who wants to build a similar system. And given that I've learnt all the mistakes in building this first one, I'd enjoy the opportunity to build another, tailored to requirements, for any LUGgers who couldn't be buggered doing it themselves. I'd have to work out a cost. Hopefully I'll soon have pics to show. Well, it has already taken pics, of me checking the beam without turning the camera off first. Before I knew it, 'click', a lovely shot of my index finger waving where I thought the beam would be. :-) Great fun this. Regards, Rick Dykstra, Australia.