Hi y'all. Complete newbee here. Has anyone invented an on-board camera that would allow you to see your layout from the engineer's point of view? I'd love to watch from my PC. If this is a dumb question, my apologies.
Thanks,
Doug
http://www.tonystrains.com/technews/traincam.htm
They even have a video to show camera in action
I myself ordered a "spy" / "nanny cam" from ebay. Cost to my door was $35.00 US funds. One thing to note, you need to know what broadcasting standard you need. IE. the US market uses one different from some parts of the world so do some checking before you buy. And be sure to get a full system.
Spy cam, receiver, power packs for both the cam and receiver along with the battery adaptor for the cam.
You can even buy a battery eliminator that works on a DCC system. It supplies power from the rails to the cam while the DCC system is up and running, no battery needed.
And it is neat as all get out to view your layout from the engineers point of view. I mounted my cam on a flatbed (taped it on with electrical tape) that I pushed it around in front of my loco but the view was great until it rounded a curve and the giant doorway came into view. I was sitting in my living room watching it on my color TV with the train making slow laps around my layout. Now I have a 19inch color TV so just think about how great it would be on a big screen plasma LCD screen TV along with a VCR to record it, some video editing software too and OMG!
Do a search of my posts around about February 1st of this year and you should be able to find my post about this matter.
Edit;
http://cs.trains.com/forums/1323616/ShowPost.aspx
If you luck up on a deal like I did, you've spent better money on worst things. So go for it and have some fun.
Johnnny_reb Once a word is spoken it can not be unspoken!
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Sure, how else can I see what's going on in the subway tunnels?
This is my "camera car," one of the non-powered units in a LifeLike Proto R-17 subway train.
(Click on the pictures for a larger view.) The camera came from here:
http://www.wirelessmicrocolorcam.com/estore/index.php
This unit is powered from a power supply which accepts the DCC voltage from the tracks, so I don't have to go with batteries. The camera transmits a radio-frequency signal back to a base receiver, which plugs into the TV. Or, in this case, the video recorder:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g82i9arQMyw
It's not the greatest video, and the scenery was far from complete when I took it. Mostly, the problem is light. I've added more lighting to the subway tunnels, and the big holes in the subway car above now have LEDs mounted in them for even more illumination.
It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse.
As Johnnny_reb mentioned, you want a camera for the North American NTSC format, not the European PAL format.
Wireless pinhole spy cams work well in this application. Cameras based on CMOS technology will not be as good quality as those based on CCD technology but they will be cheaper. Don't worry about getting a camera with audio though as the wireless transmitter/receiver only sends/receives video.
Watch it on your TV or if you have a video-in capable video card, a capture card, or a DSR board installed, on your computer.
My
Such a camera is still on my wish list.
With an usual digital camera:
here
Wolfgang
Pueblo & Salt Lake RR
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