There's a shot of underwater stuff here in the Grose River a couple of weeks ago. I work in TV production and we even used it for a shot in a waterfall for one of my jobs, instead of big/heavy duty pro gear. Worked a treat.
Rob A wrote:Cracker . And Bast... got you in the end. I was waiting for the big hand .
Can I ask how long you eek out of a battery and how many you take for seven days with the FT3?
Heh... I was going to add a credit that said, 'no March Flies were harmed in the making of this movie', however... that would be a lie.
Battery wise, I was kicking myself as I only had 1 with full juice. It lasted 27th - 31st... just. But you'll notice that there are less videos and more pics from day 4 as I knew I had to conserve. The video from the 31st onwards was low rez SD from the leader's camera...
Thanks for that. Im trying to eek out nine days. Figure Ill have to be pretty stingy. I dont really like little batteries but thems the breaks, I guess it doesnt cost much in the scheme of things to take several.
I may be preaching to the converted, but here's my battery life tips:
1. Buy a still camera that also takes HD video .... I use a Fuji Finepix with a 26x zoom 2. Make sure the camera has a "viewfinder" as well as an LCD Screen ... so you can turn the screen off and just use the viewfinder. That will save a truckload of battery life 3. Make sure the camera takes standalone batteries ... not rechargable or hard wired 4. Make sure you use Lithium batteries ... they cost more, but last forever. I filmed a whole Alaskan holiday over 4 weeks ... with one set of batteries ... with the LCD screen turned off. And I'm still using the same set of batteries I put in for my Everest Base Camp trip last year ( in which I took a mixture of video and stills)