Showing posts with label Lumix Gh1. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lumix Gh1. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Remembering the Past

The picture below was taken in front of Buckman Tavern which is closely associated with the skirmish in Lexington on April 19, 1775.  It was taken on Saturday, September 10, when many flags were placed on the lawn to commemorate Sep 11. The woman from the Tavern came out just long enough to be in the shot.

Remembering the pasts: recent and distant

Recent events are still very clear in our collective memory. Distant ones are becoming blurry.  Many things have taken place in the space between the flag and the door of the tavern.  Some glorious, some tragic. To name a few:

Sea of Tranquility
Saigon '75
Dallas '63
Hiroshima
Normandy
Auschwitz
Kitty Hawk
Gettysburg
Philladelphia '76

...
What we peer into the past the woman from the Tavern struggles to imagine.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Dynamic Range in Audio

In last week’s posting we examined dynamic range in photography.  We saw how visual information gets lost in areas outside of the range.   Today, we are looking at the same issue in the auditory realm.  Our ears can hear very faint sounds and can tolerate extremely loud ones.  Electronic devices, however, often have a narrower dynamic range.  We have all heard radios that are cranked so high they emit painfully distorted sound.

I have a Lumix GH1 camera that has an external mic input.  It takes a certain range of audio levels.  I also own a Zoom H4 audio recorder that has a line-out output.  Unfortunately, the output range of the H4 is wider than that of the GH1.  When you connect them directly, the result is highly distorted sound on the GH1.

To fix this incompatibility, I decided to make a simple voltage divider circuit in-line with a mini-stereo cable.  Since you need a cable anyway to connect the H4 to the GH1, this small circuitry does not add much to the setup.  This DIY attenuator is documented in the following video.



The Zoom H4 is an audio recording device.  You can take the WAV files it produces and sync them out with the video from the video camera in post production.   However, for quick edits, the cable with the built-in attenuator proved to be quite useful.  It reduces one extra step in post.  The following video shows the setup in action in a field interview situation.



In summary, the DIY attenuator is simple to build with Radio Shack resistors that I happen to have in my electronics parts bin.  While I needed it for my Lumix GH1 and Zoom H4 setup, it can be easily adapted for other applications.