How To Build An Automated Weatherproof Timelapse DSLR Machine Using Raspberry Pi
Apr 12, 2015
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Madis Projects were booked for a challenging time lapse project. They needed to take a time lapse of a construction site for a long duration and their previous project using a gopro was not satisfactory.
They also needed a 15 minutes interval, endless photo storage, remote management and web uploads.
What did they do? They built a lean mean weather proof DSLR time lapse machine using Raspberry Pi.
The basic building blocks were an old D40, a Raspberry Pi board, a rugged explorer case, an Eye-fi card and an old router.
The scheme is pretty basic too: use the Raspberry Pi to control the camera, connect the eye-fi card to the router, connect router to the world using 3G, upload the files to remote location.
The hardware is sitting pretty tight in the case, and a bit of dremelling, glue and a Hoya filter made a clear, drop proof outlet for the lens.

Sounds simple, right? I have to say that the tutorial that Madis supplies can get you through lots of the software and integration hurdles so maybe it is.
[A timelapse project with DSLR, Raspberry Pi, Eye-Fi and gphoto2 via hackaday]
Udi Tirosh
Udi Tirosh is an entrepreneur, photography inventor, journalist, educator, and writer based in Israel. With over 25 years of experience in the photo-video industry, Udi has built and sold several photography-related brands. Udi has a double degree in mass media communications and computer science.




































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5 responses to “How To Build An Automated Weatherproof Timelapse DSLR Machine Using Raspberry Pi”
PTP protocol is so unconsistent over long periods and large file sizes :)
i was thinking the eyefi card would be a pain, or the main pain :)
I tried the eye-fi solution, too many caveats.
Done! All onto SD for this one. But have working android solution, that’s perpetual if you’ve enough bandwidth for your shooting rate :)
http://biscuitrodeo.com/timelapse/dublin-port-18-days/
Neat project, i would love to do one too. But, imho, it seems like a single android phone with the camera on a tether could have done all of that with much less gear and electricity (for remote locations).