Steven this is a fantastic overview of the farm strip and I very much hope you continue with similar videos of places you visit. Local places to visit / eat etc are always welcome. Thanks and keep up the good work.
Steven, An excellently produced video. I've been in there a couple of times this year myself, and agree with what you said. A hidden gem. I'd be intersted to know how you get the flight instruments to display so nicely in your video.
Peter, thank you for your comment and the compliment! I take the telemetry data from the G500TXi SD card and import it into Telemetry Overlay ( goprotelemetryextractor.com/telemetry-overlay-gps-video-sensors ).
I don't use in-camera GPS because: 1) Our GoPro cameras are all mounted upside down and the GPS receiver is at the top of each camera and needs a clear view of the sky; 2) It can take a few minutes for the GoPro to lock on to a GPS signal. I use QuickCapture (one button operation on camera) to reduce workload and the GoPro App for the external Max. Even if I added a fourth camera mounted the right way up, I should still risk missing telemetry data at the start of each take and I'd only have data embedded in one video stream; 3) I want aviation relevant data: TAS and IAS, not just GPS ground speed, and barometric altitude and height. Accordingly, I take the telemetry data from the Garmin G500TXi. The Garmin PFD/MFD units record telemetry data to a CSV file (one per flight) on their SD card. I just import that file into Telemetry Overlay (which, I believe, also supports the G1000 and the G3000), sync it, export it as a transparent video (to save time and storage space), then line the telemetry video up with each of the GoPro video files in Final Cut Pro and compound the clips to maintain the synchronisation during editing. Telemetry Overlay is available at goprotelemetryextractor.com Hope this helps.
Steven this is a fantastic overview of the farm strip and I very much hope you continue with similar videos of places you visit. Local places to visit / eat etc are always welcome. Thanks and keep up the good work.
Lee, thank you so much for your comment-very much appreciated!
Steven, An excellently produced video. I've been in there a couple of times this year myself, and agree with what you said. A hidden gem. I'd be intersted to know how you get the flight instruments to display so nicely in your video.
Peter, thank you for your comment and the compliment! I take the telemetry data from the G500TXi SD card and import it into Telemetry Overlay ( goprotelemetryextractor.com/telemetry-overlay-gps-video-sensors ).
Oh and just to note, the noise abatement over a farm on the approach to 22.
Thank you for pointing that out. If it's the one that I think it is then it is 0·74 nm from the threshold.
May I ask which camera you took the telemetry from and if you have a link to the program you used please? Thank you 😊
I don't use in-camera GPS because:
1) Our GoPro cameras are all mounted upside down and the GPS receiver is at the top of each camera and needs a clear view of the sky;
2) It can take a few minutes for the GoPro to lock on to a GPS signal. I use QuickCapture (one button operation on camera) to reduce workload and the GoPro App for the external Max. Even if I added a fourth camera mounted the right way up, I should still risk missing telemetry data at the start of each take and I'd only have data embedded in one video stream;
3) I want aviation relevant data: TAS and IAS, not just GPS ground speed, and barometric altitude and height.
Accordingly, I take the telemetry data from the Garmin G500TXi. The Garmin PFD/MFD units record telemetry data to a CSV file (one per flight) on their SD card. I just import that file into Telemetry Overlay (which, I believe, also supports the G1000 and the G3000), sync it, export it as a transparent video (to save time and storage space), then line the telemetry video up with each of the GoPro video files in Final Cut Pro and compound the clips to maintain the synchronisation during editing.
Telemetry Overlay is available at goprotelemetryextractor.com
Hope this helps.