I haven't had problems with my GoPros shutting down, but they're hung out in the slipstream getting plenty of cool air....
I've had GoPros shutdown from too much cool air.
The fact the OAT was 15F might have something to do with it....
I haven't had problems with my GoPros shutting down, but they're hung out in the slipstream getting plenty of cool air....
I've had GoPros shutdown from too much cool air.
The fact the OAT was 15F might have something to do with it....
Perhaps you should apply this logic to posting on the forum.I've never allowed a camera of any stripe to function in any aircraft piloted by yours truly. My thinking has always been the less evidence made the less there is to burn.
I do quite frequently.Perhaps you should apply this logic to posting on the forum.
You quite frequently never do something? Ok.I do quite frequently.
It's been unreliable enough that even if it works I'm going to use my external recorder which I have owned since long before the GoPro existed and has never failed. I'm probably going to try it but only as a backup.
I hadn't thought of than. Thanks. Worth a shot.Have you tried getting in touch with NFlight Support? They really know their stuff.
I'm wrong about the dates. Let's say long before I had any action cam. The GoPro came out back in 2004. My SONY IC-PX312 is only 11 years old.What recorder are you using?
I have a Drift Ghost X as well. My first Apeman knock off would run for almost 3 hours which was great for the tiedown (it's the one from my Vancouver mountain video) When it finally quit working the only thing that would meet the bill was the Ghost. Seems to work well.The drift ghost X has a five hour battery life and a battery upgrade for eight hours. The basic ($99) does not have stabilization but it works fine on the tail tie down or crew cam. There is also a stabilized version, Drift ghost XL pro 4K for $249.
Im done with GoPro, and the other knockoffs.
I read this as "the go pro company is closing".
Yeah. I don't care about battery life with the cameras inside the airplane and don't worry about the ones on a tiedown overheating.I started with GoPro4's. The battery life sucks and they overheat. I now use GP9's and get way more battery life and the image stabilization is pretty awesome. When I park the airplane, I always take the camera off the windshield and put it under the seat or in the back seat in the shade. I have not had any problems with the tail shot gp9 hanging from the tail tiedown hook. Check out my "Wolf Pilot" youtube channel
Two issues. A cheap splitter works fine but only if you audio recorder has audio-in capability. Not all do. I found this out in discussions where people kept saying yo needed something special and I was using a cheap audio splitter. My stand-alone recorder prompts whether an input is audio or a mic.Timely thread for me. Was thinking about getting just one camera to record flights with audio. Was looking at GoPros, but they are too expensive for my first foray into this. Was thinking about a cheap, Chinese knockoff that doesn't have any audio. Then getting an even cheaper digital recorder to patch into the headset jack with a splitter. The only thing that I guess will be a challenge is trying to stitch together then audio and video.... Once I figure that out I think I can get it to work.
Timely thread for me. Was thinking about getting just one camera to record flights with audio. Was looking at GoPros, but they are too expensive for my first foray into this. Was thinking about a cheap, Chinese knockoff that doesn't have any audio. Then getting an even cheaper digital recorder to patch into the headset jack with a splitter. The only thing that I guess will be a challenge is trying to stitch together then audio and video.... Once I figure that out I think I can get it to work.
the clap. you need to get the clap.
Have you checked these out? I use one of them to record from my Hero7 and it uses the back passenger jack to get all the audio from the audio panel. It also has a way for me to run a battery brick through it and give juice to the Hero7 so I don't have to rely on the crappy GoPro batteries.@midlifeflyer Thanks!!
Yeah, honestly I would rather get a camera that had a simple 3.5mm audio-in jack... or even a usb-c input that I could get a 3.5mm audio adapter for. But, unfortunately, these don't seem to exist. I was looking at the AKASO ones, but none of them seem to have audio in. Some have an external mic, but the jack looks like it is proprietary (of course). Anybody know of a cheap(ish) camera with an audio input that would be fairly easy to tap into the panel?
They don't. Unless you go external, your best bet is to get the proprietary* mic and sticking it into the earcup of your headset. When I heard about doing that my first reaction was "oh sure!" but I tried it recently. It actually does a decent job.@midlifeflyer Thanks!!
Yeah, honestly I would rather get a camera that had a simple 3.5mm audio-in jack... or even a usb-c input that I could get a 3.5mm audio adapter for. But, unfortunately, these don't seem to exist. I was looking at the AKASO ones, but none of them seem to have audio in. Some have an external mic, but the jack looks like it is proprietary (of course). Anybody know of a cheap(ish) camera with an audio input that would be fairly easy to tap into the panel?
I do too with the Hero 4 but it doesn't work with the Chinese knockoffs he's talking about.Have you checked these out? I use one of them to record from my Hero7 and it uses the back passenger jack to get all the audio from the audio panel. It also has a way for me to run a battery brick through it and give juice to the Hero7 so I don't have to rely on the crappy GoPro batteries.
https://www.nflightcam.com/collections/cables