First of all, congratulations for your succesful exhibition.
Larky - 28 June 2008 05:30 PM
I think it’s down to the fact we glued it in backwards, or upside down depending upon how you look at it. The matt side is what the viewer is supposed to see, but we glues it matt side to the beamer to reduce glare. That’s the only thin I can think made it work. It’s been running for over 72 hours with about 1000 users in that time, no restarts, still fast, lights turning on/off, sun going past the huge windows etc. When the show is over we’ll test with it glues on the other way.
Rosco Grey arrived and I found that no matter if the matt side is upside or downside. Only matter to reduce glare.
I have a BW Fire-I camera with two negative films, 24 OP298 leds (890nm), a 4mm glass and a box of 30x30x30 cm for testing. I compared vellum paper with rosco gray on the bottom side (camera side), without ambient light and with an incandescent lamp pointing to ceiling. You can see my setup and results in the attached images.
I see that with vellum and rosco, the ambient light affect the blob detection. With vellum, I can see brighter fingers in both cases on the camera image, but with rosco, the fingers turn black when I turn on the light.
I have a few questions about your configuration to figure how do you get to work well on variable light conditions:
What camera do you used?
Do you used negative filters or another filter?
How do you setup your leds on your box? in the center, on a corner, angled?
It’s posible to see a picture of your internal configuration?
Thanks for your help