Cybersecurity & cyberwarfare on Nostr: Camera Slider Uses Repositionable Rail To Do Rotational Moves You can buy motorized ...
Camera Slider Uses Repositionable Rail To Do Rotational Moves
You can buy motorized camera sliders off-the-shelf, but they’re pretty costly. Alternatively, you can make one yourself, and it’s not even that hard if you’re kitted out with a 3D printer. [Creative 3D Printing] did just that with a nifty design that adds rotation into the mix. Check it out in the video below.
Why should a camera get all the fun? Try your phone.
The basic slider is built out of 3D-printed components and some good old aluminum extrusion. A small 12-volt motor trucks the camera cart back and forth using a leadscrew. It’s torquey enough and slow enough that there isn’t much need for more advanced control—the motor just does the job. There’s also a limit switch set up to trigger a neat auto-reverse function.
The neat part, though, is the rotational mechanism. A smooth steel rod is attached to the slider’s housing, which can be set up in a straight line or aligned diagonally if desired. In the latter case, it rotates the mounting on the camera cart via a crank, panning the camera as it moves along the slider’s trajectory.
It’s a mechanically sophisticated design and quite unlike most of the camera sliders we feature around these parts.
youtube.com/embed/PahI6_XiGlk?…
hackaday.com/2024/12/23/camera…
Published at
2024-12-24 00:00:11Event JSON
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"content": "Camera Slider Uses Repositionable Rail To Do Rotational Moves\n\nYou can buy motorized camera sliders off-the-shelf, but they’re pretty costly. Alternatively, you can make one yourself, and it’s not even that hard if you’re kitted out with a 3D printer. [Creative 3D Printing] did just that with a nifty design that adds rotation into the mix. Check it out in the video below.\nWhy should a camera get all the fun? Try your phone.\nThe basic slider is built out of 3D-printed components and some good old aluminum extrusion. A small 12-volt motor trucks the camera cart back and forth using a leadscrew. It’s torquey enough and slow enough that there isn’t much need for more advanced control—the motor just does the job. There’s also a limit switch set up to trigger a neat auto-reverse function.\n\nThe neat part, though, is the rotational mechanism. A smooth steel rod is attached to the slider’s housing, which can be set up in a straight line or aligned diagonally if desired. In the latter case, it rotates the mounting on the camera cart via a crank, panning the camera as it moves along the slider’s trajectory.\n\nIt’s a mechanically sophisticated design and quite unlike most of the camera sliders we feature around these parts.\n\nyoutube.com/embed/PahI6_XiGlk?…\n\nhackaday.com/2024/12/23/camera…\n\nhttps://hackaday.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/DIY-3D-Printed-Motorized-Camera-Slider-6-7-screenshot.png?w=800\nhttps://hackaday.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/DIY-3D-Printed-Motorized-Camera-Slider-1-58-screenshot-1.png?w=250\nhttps://hackaday.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/DIY-3D-Printed-Motorized-Camera-Slider-1-58-screenshot-1.png",
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