Getting JPG from fast moving object

rauska2

n3wb
Nov 13, 2023
7
0
finland
Hello, I have a timing question.
I want to take a JPG picture of an airplane flying at about 120 km/h during a landing.

The camera's field of view is 50m wide at the target distance.
At that time, the airplane is visible for about 1.5 seconds.
Video: 3840x2160 26 fps.

I would like BI to take a picture where the airplane is roughly in the middle of the picture, i.e. at 0.75 seconds.On the other hand, if the picture was taken at about 0.5 - 0.9 seconds, then the entire airplane would be in the picture at a speed of 100-140 km/h.

Now the settings are as follows, which most often result in two pictures. So what setting should I change so that I only get one picture?

Motion trigger make time 0.3 s
Motion End trigger if not re-triggered 0.3 s
JPEG each 0:00.9
pretrigger rec time 0 s
pretrigger play time 0 s

Video is not saved, which is the intention.

A solution could be if the option (when triggered each m:ss.s) had an option to take one picture after a selected time. But maybe by adjusting those earlier ones, that one picture would be successful.
 
Could you setup a trip wire to trigger when the plane gets to the middle of the view, does the your camera have any sort of built in AI or trigger logic!
 
The trip wire would be part of the Cameras AI, but you don't have any!

I would suggest that you look at the Zones & Hotspots setup on the camera setup, "Motion/Trigger", "Enable motion sensor" then click on the "Configure" button, Then select "Use zones and hot spot", click on "Edit zone map" once on that screen click on the help button and start reading about zone crossing and the hot spot zone. Come back and ask further questions if needed!
 
You do realise that CCTV cameras don't produce pictures you can zoom into well? (A PTZ can but only because it optically zooms in before the capture not into the final picture). If you take a picture using a regular wide angle camera, then there's virtually no chance of it ever being anything more than a spec in sky zoomed out, or an unrecognisable blurry blob if zoomed into the capture. This really sounds like a job for a DSLR.,
 
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You do realise that CCTV cameras don't produce pictures you can zoom into well? (A PTZ can but only because it optically zooms in before the capture not into the final picture). If you take a picture using a regular wide angle camera, then there's virtually no chance of it ever being anything more than a spec in sky zoomed out, or an unrecognisable blurry blob if zoomed into the capture. This really sounds like a job for a DSLR.,
Well, I don't need to zoom in on the picture because it's enough that the plane is visible.
 

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