Quote of the day for 11-Mar-2010 Previous quotes
If you have a garden and a library, you have everything you need.

- Marcus Tullius Cicero

So far today I have:
Driven to Conway
Waited in line for thirty minutes to take a motorcycle written test
Passed the test
Waited in line at the post office to have pictures taken for a passport renewal
Sent off my passport renewal
Drove from Conway to Perryville
Assessed personal property tax (and changed my address)
Paid my overdue personal property and real property tax (and changed my address)
Had a motorcycle endorsement added to my driver’s license (and changed my address)
Renewed my automobile tags (and changed my address)
Oh, and bought some things at Home Depot (that didn’t require changing an address)

I’m ready to sit down for a bit.



Day 252 – Wordless Wednesday



Several times recently I have found myself in a situation where I wanted to take a self-portrait, but had no good way to trip the shutter at the right time. I usually use either my wireless remote (2-second delay), or my wired remote (either immediate or the camera’s 10-second delay). The problem is usually that I need several seconds of set-up time, and then have no easy way to access the shutter release.

My solution has been to set the camera on continuous and use the switch on my wired remote to start it off. The biggest problem with that method is that continuous-mode takes a quick burst of images (almost certainly when I’m not yet ready), and then slows down as the internal buffer fills and writes to the Compact Flash card are needed. To complicate this even more, subsequent exposures are at varying intervals, depending on the size of the previous photos and the write speed of the Compact Flash card.

So, I decided I needed a way to trigger the shutter at regular intervals that were close enough together to be useful, but far enough apart to prevent the buffer to fill (it would also be nice if my external flash had time to recharge, but that’s of secondary concern).

I remembered that my Radio Shack Engineer’s handbook had all sorts of projects using 555 timers. Of course, I couldn’t find my copy. It may still be somewhere at UALR. It’s also been out of print for many years. Ebay to the rescue. I found someone who had scanned all the Radio Shack mini-notebooks (ignoring copyright law) and was selling the PDFs for a reasonable sum.

Thus armed, I began my project.

The circuit I needed was already completely laid out:
intervalometer

A trip to Little Rock and Radio Shack yielded most of the parts I needed. The one thing they didn’t have was a breadboard. Only after I was back home did I discover that only one RS in Little Rock stocks them (according to the website). I didn’t want to drive back into Little Rock, but convinced myself to go to Conway instead and visit the store there which had them in stock.

Back home and construction begins. I followed the plan, and lo and behold it worked perfectly the first time!

Intervalometer 001
Intervalometer 002

Now all that was necessary was to get the relay wired to the camera. This introduced another project I had been putting off — a shutter release cable extension. When I first built my wired release I made it far longer than any commercially-available cable. It’s around 40 feet. You would think this would be plenty, but I have on occasion needed it longer. Since Canon uses 3/16-inch, 3-conductor plugs, extension cables seem to be non-existent (at least I haven’t been able to find any anywhere. I didn’t want to build up a single extension cable (of whatever length) and then need more, so I decided on a more extensible solution. I built a short cable and put XLR connectors in the middle of it. In fact, the jack is actually in the shell of one XLR connector.
Intervalometer 003

This gives me the ability to insert a microphone cable of any length into the line. I have Microphone cables anywhere from five to 100 feet.

Now with this in mind, instead of putting a 3/16-inch plug on my intervalometer (I really don’t like trying to solder to plugs that small), I could just use an XLR connector.

Intervalometer 004
Intervalometer 005

I plugged it into the camera and it worked perfectly. The only problem was with the potentiometer specified in the diagram. The usable intervals were in too small a range. I didn’t want intervals measured in minutes. I may replace it with one of a smaller range, but in the meantime have substituted a pair of 100K-ohm resistors (not having a 50K-ohm handy). This gives me a fixed interval of about 4 seconds, which seemed pretty reasonable to me.

The final step will be to transfer the circuit from the breadboard onto a pc board and solder everything in place. I’m saving that for another evening.

Just for reference, a Buffalo Time-Step consists of:

 L        R         R
Flap  Shuffle  Step, lifting LF in sur le cou de pied
a 8     + a      1

L to L   RF      L         R         L
 Flap   Flap   Step    Shuffle  Hop
 + 2     + 3     +        4 +       5

RXBL   L unX     R
Step   Shuffle  Hop
 +      6 +      7

I spent my Christmas evening at The Rep watching Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. Let me start by saying “wow!” The cast was excellent, especially the woman playing the narrator. The energy was there at the beginning and never let up. I don’t think I’ll find myself singing any of the songs from it, but I’d definitely be interested in watching it again sometime. There’s so much going on I certainly couldn’t catch everything in one sitting. I got my reservation fairly early and so had my favorite seat in the house, C14. That’s the third row from the stage and dead center. The first two rows are actually a bit too close for me, as you have to look up at all the action, and can actually miss things at the back of the stage. If you haven’t seen Joseph yet and can still get tickets, I highly recommend you try to catch it.

I was filing my nails while driving along Highway 10 and was reminded of yet another law we don’t need on the books: 27-51-1504. Use of a handheld wireless telephone when driving.

Now, I think it’s a really bad idea to try and send or receive messages while driving. That’s not the point. The point is that the legislation is a) too specific, and b) unnecessary.

This law prevents text messaging or email, but does not prevent web-surfing or, for instance, writing blog entries. It also only addresses one behavior, and not others, such as putting on makeup or, say, filing one’s nails.

The reason it’s unnecessary is that we already have “27-51-104. Careless and prohibited driving.” on the books. If a person is doing anything which pulls their attention away from the road, they are already in violation of that law. Was there really a need to add another one?

I realize that legislators are not nearly as concerned about safety as they are about the appearance of “doing something”, but must we have more pointless laws?

This rant has been brought to you by the letters G and N and by the number 17.

I spent yesterday evening at the Rep watching “Follie Holidays”. This is their annual presentation by the young people that they have in their summer program. It was quite entertaining. It’s wonderful to see kids learning song and dance and performing. It gives me hope for the arts in Arkansas. They did a wonderful rendition of “I Sing the Body Electric” that actually brought goose bumps to my arms.

It was a very enjoyable evening. The next Rep show is “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat”. I have a ticket for December 25th. Anyone want to join me?

Today, for the first time in a couple of months, my Wii told me I was “overweight” rather than “obese”. That is progress, even if only in a small way. I have put myself on a diet of ~1,000 calories per day. Seriously cutting back on my intake is the only I’ve ever successfully lost weight in the past, and it seems to be working again. Now if I can only keep it up for another fifteen pounds or so…

I have now spent more on dentistry care in the past month than in the previous several years. I was having pains in an upper left molar when I went in for my most recent checkup. The dentist examined it and determined I needed a crown. In attempting this simple procedure, it was found that I needed a root canal first. So, off to the endodontist for that procedure. (A small aside, my previous dentist did root canals himself. Having now had one done by a skilled endodontist, I will never let another general dentist attempt one on me, Dr. Penney was *excellent*). Once the root canal had been performed (and paid for), it was back to the dentist for the crown. I now have a temporary and an appointment in two weeks for the permanent crown. Dental insurance is good, but I’m still out of pocket over $1,000 for all this.

Just another expense that I really don’t need at the moment.

I’m one of those people who read nutrition labels. Okay, that’s not quite true. I *scan* nutrition labels to find out the calorie count. It rarely keeps me from eating something, but at least I know why I’m not losing weight.

Today for lunch I fixed a California Pizza Kitchens pizza. The nutrition label said that one serving was 1/5 of a pizza. One-fifth? Come on now, let’s use something reasonable. I don’t know anyone who slices a pizza into 5 sections (or any multiple thereof). Make it a sixth or a fourth and I’ll at least agree that it’s a reasonable division. Of course, I consider one-half to be a single serving. Back to that whole not-losing-weight thing again.

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