
Well i was out tonight in 4 degrees shooting for about an hour, my lens was completely condensated after about an hour, i mean dripping. Any solutions for this? I have a celestron 9.25 telescope that i can strap these heater straps too but there a bit big for a lens![]()
CanonEOS said:Maybe you should go to Harbin in China - 35c so -20c is nothing who told you batteries don't last as long in the cold? thats crap never heard of that before i live in China.
IMO if you think the batteries are going to get cold what about the camera? oh my don't take it anywhere from a warn home if you are that worried. I think Canon solve this problem on the dslr long ago a camera is a lot tougher than you think.
The Boz said:Thanks for the advice islander. I just bought a spare battery yesterday, should be getting it through the post either tomorrow or early next week.
Digressing I know, but I couldn't believe how expensive genuine batteries are! Fifty-odd quid! I was never gonna pay that when copies are about £15. Ended up going for a used genuine one from a dealers for £15. Hopefully I won't be able to tell it from the one I've already got
I thought about this thread when I was watching the 'how they made it' bit of Frozen Planet last night. The producer/cameraman (not sure which it was) was using a Nikon when it was below -30 in Siberia. Think -10 should be fine.![]()
What else is affected by the cold?
Batteries flatten very fast. We had a system where we would use a pair of V Lock batteries on our video cameras and a bigger thermal cover to go over both the camera and the battery pair and then leave the camera on standby. The warmth generated by it being on standby keeps everything toasty and the thermal insulation jacket would keep all the heat in.
Did you modify kit for cold temperatures?
On our Cineflex aerial filming system we had heaters around servo motors and circuit boards. We had some gear specially made for us - a motion control rig which we collaborated on with a company called Control Freaks. They built a lighter weight motion control rig than we'd had on Planet Earth that was built from the ground up to work in freezing temperatures.
Dave1 said:The BBC did have special gear for their cameras, this is from an interview they gave about the making of Frozen Planet.
Probably a bit more expensive than a zip lock back, a hand warmer and a spare battery.![]()