Smith & Wesson in action!
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- Pyroxene
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Smith & Wesson in action!
Here you go! This is one of the coolest photos I have ever taken. A friend and I were on his property and I captured this image while he pulled the trigger on my Smith & Wesson. You can see the bullet, fire in the barrel and in the cylinder.
It was captured using a Canon GL1 at 30 progressive frames per second. According to some research I did, the bullet is moving about 850 feet per second.
It was captured using a Canon GL1 at 30 progressive frames per second. According to some research I did, the bullet is moving about 850 feet per second.
Last edited by Pyroxene on Mon Aug 25, 2003 10:31 am, edited 4 times in total.
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- Pyroxene
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I thought of the same thing. What makes this rare is that it was done with standard semi-professional equipment. Usually, you need a strobe light to capture something that fast. This was just pure coincidence that the shutter opened at that particular moment. And, I think it was one of the last rounds of the day.schwammy wrote:Did you ever see the National Geographic photo of a rifle bullet slicing a playing card in half?
Pyroxene
PS - You can find cool high speed photos on this site. http://www.rit.edu/~andpph/exhibit-3.html
Pyr
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Very interesting picture. I've seen and shot photos with highspeed video that has shown this type shot, as well as explosions from platter charges etc. using C-4 explosives. This photo REALLY shows how slow that big old bullet moves from these big Smiths, as what you DON'T see is the horrendous flame flash that takes place in the bullet jump between the cylinder and the forcing cone of the barrel, and appears on both sides of the front of the cylinder. That has already taken place, and yet you can STILL see the bullet just after it has left the end of the barrel in the muzzle flame flash. Impressive study, and at 30 fps, an EXTREMELY lucky photo capture. I'd suggest (if you haven't already done so) making a high definition hard copy of this photo, document all info on the back, including the names of those involved, then framing it to hang in your Indy/rec room. It's one to be proud of. Regards. Michaelson
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Re: Smith & Wesson in action!
That is a cool photo! Nice work, Pyro!
-Edge
Pyroxene wrote:According to some research I did, the bullet is moving about 850 feet per second.
He'll have to be really lucky to capture that since the popper on a whip is travelling between 1200 and 1400 fps when it cracks.Mike wrote:Is a whip crack next?
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