Camera lightning trigger
posted Jun 11th 2008 10:30pm by Eliot Phillipsfiled under: digital cameras hacks

The people at [Hobby Robotics] decided to build a trigger circuit for lightning photography. There are more complex ways to do this, but they just used a photo transistor and an Arduino. The Arduino watches the photo transistor’s value and compares it to the previously captured one. If the difference is above a certain threshold, it means a rapid change in the amount of light has occurred, which triggers the shutter. An earlier post covered how to directly control the Canon 30d using an Arduino. All of this works because the shutter lag and code execution together are less than lighting’s 100ms duration.





Yes Yes. a proper hardware hack. Elliot good to have you back.
Man where was this a year ago. There were a bunch of us lonely retards sitting on a dock in Florida trying to capture lightning manually. Of course the lightning was about 30 miles off and the flashes weren’t that bright to trigger this (the headlights of cars on HW 1 would have triggered it easier). Needless to say we didnt get much.
Say, Would there be a way to make this Highly directional to facilitate catching the precise area you wanted?
Posted at 1:41 am on Jun 12th, 2008 by Hal Hockersmith