George Lawrence Photography Revisited 62
danlor writes "We were all taken aback 4 years ago when someone linked us the history of George Lawrence and his photos of the aftermath of the 1906 San Fransisco earthquake. I personally thought to myself: man, I would love to make one of those cameras. The idea of flying 2,000-pound cameras with kites... Well, someone has actually recreated the feat. They even provide links to get large prints of the original and recreated scenes."
Recreate? (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:Recreate? (Score:4, Funny)
I think their server is getting one hell of a simulation right now.
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Re:Recreate? (Score:5, Funny)
FAA. (Score:2)
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Maybe they could have asked this guy for some help: http://home.earthlink.net/~quade/lawnchair.html/ [earthlink.net]
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If they'd had 15 helicopter strung together then maybe...
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Boring (Score:2)
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Helicopter! (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Helicopter! (Score:5, Insightful)
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Next Up (Score:4, Funny)
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2,000 lbs? (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:2,000 lbs? (Score:4, Informative)
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According to TFA, the camera weighed only a rather less impressive 46 lbs.
46 pound camera + a 6 lb weight for stability. Still somewhat short of 2,000 lbs.
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Fine Print (Score:3, Interesting)
"Although flying kites should be the method of choice, more important is to obtain the correct image. Air space restrictions, and common sense required the use of a helicopter. The new image was shot from the exact location as Lawrence achieved in 1906."
That is according to the new photographers. I just love their usage of the word "exact". Uh huh. Not to mention a helicopter was used instead of a kite.
The original page states a 46 pound camera, but the article states 2000 pounds.
"I'm sure the Mr. Lawrence would have used a helicopter if it had been available. We had a wonderful side trip"
I don't doubt that. The article is misleading and contradictory, and I did not see what I thought I was going to see. What they accomplished is pretty neat, and certainly good photography, but not groundbreaking or particularly mind blowing.
I just feel like the ol' bait and switch gag has been played on us
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The photos that the dude with the kites originally took are awesome achievements if you take into account the way pictures were developed back then, but like you said, this is a way misleading article.
I was waiting for the actual part where they hoisted a home-made box camera (not hard to make, I made several...) onto a kite.
This suxors...
Re:Fine Print (Score:4, Informative)
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As one of the other posters pointed out, there was a difference between recreating the photo, and recreating the ACT of taking the photo.
I already said, it was a good photo (even though the website is down and I can't see it), but it is not groundbreaking, and it is not represented by the language of the article.
Point in fact, I COULD make the photograph. Just get a buddy with a helicopter, GPS, and
2,000 feet, not pounds. (Score:5, Informative)
Kites... (Score:2)
The summary is wrong. It defies common sense that someone would be flying a 907kg (2,000lb, for SI-impaired ones) anything on a kite. Actually, the camera had around 21kg (46lb), as stated by TFA. But the kite was flying around 610m (2,000ft) high, and this is where I think the figure came from.
I also doubt the a kite can carry 2000lb, but kites can still carry quite a load. During the years leading up to WWI observation baskets lifted by a string of kites were used for artillery spotting. Kites were later abandoned in favor of kite-balloons and aircraft but a pure kite could still lift at least one observer, his equipment and even a passenger. Some of the systems used were pretty similar to the one seen in the drawing on that page linked to in TFA [asu.edu] except of course the kites were much larger. The
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Not to start a metric flamewar, but the people impaired with SI are likely the ones who would need the translation- from lbs to kgs.
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Now back my calculations for the next Mars mission...
Coral Cache (Score:1)
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http://www.ronkleinphotos.com.nyud.net/Lawrence.html [nyud.net]
http://www.ronkleinphotos.com.nyud.net/success.html [nyud.net]
http://www.ronkleinphotos.com.nyud.net/lawrenceorderform.html [nyud.net]
Please mod parent redundant.
Coral Cache seems to work (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.ronkleinphotos.com.nyud.net:8090/Lawrence.html [nyud.net]
http://www.ronkleinphotos.com.nyud.net:8090/success.html [nyud.net]
PS. Install the Slashdotter extension for Firefox, does the CC links automagically.
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2000 pounds? (Score:3, Informative)
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That's nearly a tonne...
That is a tonne. An imperial tonne that is.
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There's no such thing. An imperial ton is 2240lbs (20 hundred-weight of 8 stone each). The reason for the odd numbers is that measurements grew out of a system for trade which allowed for the weight of barrels. So a hundred-weight of 112lbs was supposed to be 100lbs of actual cargo and 12lbs of packaging.
The American system discared the packing allowances and so the American "short" ton is 2000lbs.
TWW
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Film was much heavier back then.
The 3 years after photo (Score:1, Interesting)
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lead kite! (Score:3, Funny)
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Not only were the cameras weighing 45+ pounds each, but the kite itself was made of lead!! (See illustration) http://activetectonics.asu.edu/kites/06eq.html [asu.edu]
While your picture refers the leading kite...I don't see how a lead (Pb) would be a problem.
The MythBusters (production #112, 1/23/2008) [wikipedia.org] have already shown that a lead balloon is quite possible - i think I would have done it slightly differently (by plying together a few layers of the lead foil they used to make a stronger foil surface), but it did work. I see no reason why a Lead (Pb) kite wouldn't be possible either, though certainly not trivial to do. (BTW, their Lead Balloon used Lead Foil and at le
kite lifting (Score:2, Informative)
but here is a link to show a kite CAN lift more then you think
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FHkAL1jTojY [youtube.com]
If it had been Available (Score:2)
...I'm sure the Mr. Lawrence would have used a helicopter if it had been available...
He would have used an airship if he had had the money.
On the other hand:
I'm sure he would have used a Leica Aviophot RC30 camera if it had been available.
I'm sure he would have used digital post processing and multi-spectral analysis if it had been available.
I'm sure he would have driven a Saleen S7 to the airport for the shoot - if either the Saleen or the airport had been available.
Modern kite photography is alive and well (Score:2)
It's The Camera (Score:3, Insightful)
Times change ... (Score:2)
I think they call those "spy satellites" nowadays.