ChatterBank0 min ago
Is This A U F O ?
17 Answers
I saw this on Facebook and it looked strange so I thought that I would share. It seems that this whirly bird is whirling very much at all.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Nailit I'm not trying to trick you. Please read my first answer. The rotor blades are synching but the other things in the film are not, so they appear normal. They would only appear different as well if they were doing a similar thing. So if the waves were moving at exactly 270 frames per second, all of them, all at once, they would appear more choppy because they would be at precisely half the camera's framerate, so it would appear a little like stop motion.
If you keep watching the video to the end the next video up explains it all. Just keep watching!
The roter is rotating (obviously) so the the blades will be in the same position at some point it every rotation.So if the camera frame (picture taking) rate is the same as the rotation rate every picture (frame) will show the blades in the same position. The boat is moving forward it does not keep coming back to the same position, so that will never 'sync' no matter what the camera's frame rate is.
You used to get a similar effect on old cowboy films where the stagecoach wheels looked as if they were going backwards. Again that was just a 'sync' effect between the rotation of the wheels and the frame rate of the camera.
The roter is rotating (obviously) so the the blades will be in the same position at some point it every rotation.So if the camera frame (picture taking) rate is the same as the rotation rate every picture (frame) will show the blades in the same position. The boat is moving forward it does not keep coming back to the same position, so that will never 'sync' no matter what the camera's frame rate is.
You used to get a similar effect on old cowboy films where the stagecoach wheels looked as if they were going backwards. Again that was just a 'sync' effect between the rotation of the wheels and the frame rate of the camera.