Update: PCBs now available and the design files are posted; PM me your email address if you want one. $8 plus shipping, $15 with a rotary encoder, relay and some of the other required parts like pin headers.
Update: PCBs now available and the design files are posted; PM me your email address if you want one. $8 plus shipping, $15 with a rotary encoder, relay and some of the other required parts like pin headers.
ex-Pic-A-Day (slowed after 2 years)
on flickr
Analogue Photo and Film FAQ (for APUG)
Open Source F/Stop Timer
Update: construction photos posted.
ex-Pic-A-Day (slowed after 2 years)
on flickr
Analogue Photo and Film FAQ (for APUG)
Open Source F/Stop Timer
New software release. PCBs all sold out.
ex-Pic-A-Day (slowed after 2 years)
on flickr
Analogue Photo and Film FAQ (for APUG)
Open Source F/Stop Timer
The iPhone display can display a wide range of colors-surely one safe for photo paper could be identified? It might be a little more demanding/ expensive to go the iPhone route, but multi-functional devices are generally worth the extra effort, and everyone already owns a smart phone.
Also, your timer is very cool! Thank you for sharing!
If you're interested in the smartphone approach, look at Droid in the Dark. Someone on APUG is putting together an integrated suite of stuff including fstop timer that connects to a droid via Bluetooth. In theory the hardware is just a mains switch hanging off a BT adapter and of course you do all the control on the phone.
I would love the ability to have a huge touchscreen for input, not to mention the massive storage & internet connectivity available in a smartphone, but in practise the interface hardware is an expensive superset of everything in my timer and my paper testing shows that iPhones at least will fog paper with the LCD in dark-red mode. The attenuation of blue from the backlight just isn't sufficient, however if you had true-LED (eg OLED) display instead of an LCD in front of backlights, it would be possible to achieve a paper-safe display depending on the LEDs used in the display.
Edit: I'm part way through writing a Java program that talks to the timer over USB. Given that it's Java/USB, I would expect it to be fairly easy to port it to a droid and control my timer over the USB port (with cable, sorry) using a smartphone or tablet if you really wanted to. You can run (not to mention easily specify) much more-complex exposure programs when not constrained by a tiny memory and display.
ex-Pic-A-Day (slowed after 2 years)
on flickr
Analogue Photo and Film FAQ (for APUG)
Open Source F/Stop Timer
Bookmarks