Qhimm.com Forums
Off-topic forums => Completely Unrelated => Topic started by: jeffdamann on 2011-07-07 01:11:48
-
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RaOIR0ri3F8&NR=1
How IN THE WORLD are the wheels not moving. Ive studied this video for like 10 minutes now and can see no reasonable solution.
One guy in the comments said that the wheels could be doing 25 rotations per second ecactly, and if thats what the camera records at then the result would be non-moving wheels. But come on, what are the odds of the wheels moving at the precise speed of the camera for the entire video
I also see no ways how something like this could be faked. Care to solve the mystery?
EDIT: I studied the shadows and it seemed that when it comes back into the light you can see movement in the shadows.
My wife then pointed out the bolts/rivets on the tire rim. At the very end you can see them spinning on the rim, as if the rim is turning and the tire is not... Freaky.
-
Obvious stop motion is obvious.
-
but the rims are clearly turning at the end... and how would you get the wheels to be EXACT every frame? I mean thing of what kind of awesome coordination would be needed to pick the 4 wheeler up and turn the wheels backwards for every inch and frame that they move it?
I fail to see stop motion doing this.. Its looks to perfect, even stop motion professionals cant make it look PERFECT
-
Double wheeled, the big tires are kept stationary, there's a smaller tire inside around the wheel.
-
That might explain the two wheels facing the camera, but you can clearly see upon studying the video that this isnt the case with the two wheels away from the camera.
Plus there are several other videos of it driving regularly.
-
If you look at the #2 video they look cgi.
-
just the way the video was recorded. i don't think any tricks are involved though it does look pretty cool. Think when you watch other cars driving on the highway, sometimes it looks like the rims are spinning backwards.
-
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LVwmtwZLG88
...you can't explain that. (I actually can)
-
NFITC1, I would be interested in your explanation.
On a side note, if you have the same issue I have / had with YouTube videos (videos staying as a black box, no play button available), you just need to add a "s" after http in the url so the link becomes https://.
Apparently it's not a problem on your end, but on YouTube's, since many people with many different hardware and software configurations have the same issue.
-
NFITC1, I would be interested in your explanation.
The explanation is in the description (or maybe the comments) and I think it's perfectly valid. What's happening is that the camera records video in rows of pixels top-to-bottom. The propeller is moving so fast that by the time a row of pixels has been saved to a frame, the propeller has moved to a new position. When the next row has been captured the propeller has rotated. So row 1 has the propeller at, say, 5 degrees, while row two has it at 17 or more. Most "good" digital video recorders have a high rate of recording, but a plane's propellers just happens to be just faster than that.
On a side note, if you have the same issue I have / had with YouTube videos (videos staying as a black box, no play button available), you just need to add a "s" after http in the url so the link becomes https://.
Apparently it's not a problem on your end, but on YouTube's, since many people with many different hardware and software configurations have the same issue.
I've been having that problem lately. It is a YouTube thing.
-
Possibly in the seconds before the video begins, he was flying down the road and slammed on the breaks. The video might just show him skidding to a stop.
-PitBrat
-
Haven't read any comments but isn't it just a case of the camera frame rate making it look like wheels aren't moving?
-
Haven't read any comments but isn't it just a case of the camera frame rate making it look like wheels aren't moving?
that would be my guess not all video cameras record at 25 fps only PAL ones do. infact based on the location the video is shot the local FPS (NTSC-U) camera would be 29.95 FPS assuming its analog. its possible that the tires rotate at that speed. BUT the most likley this video is filmed on a digital camera or a cell phone. as you may know if you screw w/ your settings those devices usually allow for a varitey of FPS to capture. and it does not even have to be at the tires rpm it could be at any multiple of it the fps (ie. Tire rpm = 40 RPM and FPS = 10) that should apear not to spin also. this does not count the insane number of ways you can try to fake it.
-
Haven't read any comments but isn't it just a case of the camera frame rate making it look like wheels aren't moving?
This would be my instinct. I don't know how hard that is to pull off in practice, though.
-
its probably just the fps lining up with the tire rotation.. however as to the comment about stop motion not possible to be perfect... sure it can! just takes along time... i'd vouch the AT-AT snow fight in empire strikes back... the AT-ATs were stop motioned!
-
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gzSYnGEqof8
Same shit, different video.