StephenFrink 9 Posted June 28, 2008 (edited) While I had done some polecam work with my Seacam e-monitor, yesterday was the first time I tried it underwater. Used this set-up to let the schooling fish acclimate to the housing, and get properly polarized in front of dome: Even got myself in the photo, as the cable can be up to 50 meters in length and still trigger the camera. Probably very interesting applications for research and deep water remote applications as camera & monitor can go to to 80 meters. Have to play with it some more. Edited June 28, 2008 by StephenFrink Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Alex_Mustard 0 Posted June 28, 2008 Very interesting and impressive. I think Seacam deserve a lot of credit for constantly trying to push forward the capabilities of underwater photographic kit. I can think of some very interesting uses for this already. Is that also a Seacam tripod. It would be great to have one that could take UW usage. It would be pretty essential with this kit. Alex Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Tom_Kline 137 Posted June 29, 2008 Probably very interesting applications for research and deep water remote applications as camera & monitor can go to to 80 meters. I think that at least some research applications would involve 24h monitoring or may need VCR recording capability. Does the finder camera work in near-darkness and is the video feed compatible with NTSC VCRs? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
StephenFrink 9 Posted June 29, 2008 (edited) Alex asked: "Is that also a Seacam tripod?" Yes, Alex. Handy little thing as it is very light and takes up hardly any travel space. The three rods that serve as legs unscrew and then all you have is the small semi-sphere that has the ball head adapter. You need to find a flat bit of rubble or sand to set it on, as legs don't telescope like a topside tripod, but nice addition to travel kit. Tom said: "I think that at least some research applications would involve 24h monitoring or may need VCR recording capability. Does the finder camera work in near-darkness and is the video feed compatible with NTSC VCRs?" I don't know about "near-darkness", but for sure records in very low light according to my admittedly non-scientific observation. As for the video feed, I think so Tom. If you look at the bottom of the monitor in the UW shot you'll see two more ports that are capped off (S6 connectors). One is for a separate remote trigger, in case you don't want to use the button on the monitor to fire the shutter. The other one is a video output designed for video goggles (topside use only). I have to believe that could feed to a VCR just as easily. It seems like a diver could set it up UW, and the video-out cable could lead to a VCR on the surface. Or for that matter, the whole monitor could go to the surface as it works up to 50-meters away from the housing. I'm certainly not an expert in the video end of things, but it seems that would be the case. Edited June 29, 2008 by StephenFrink Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
divegypsy 20 Posted July 3, 2008 Sounds like a very expensive way to take pictures of yourself. Wouldn't a mirror do? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Steve Williams 0 Posted July 3, 2008 Wouldn't a mirror do? Not near as much fun! Steve Share this post Link to post Share on other sites