I arrived here in Hawaii with my hexacopter and a rugged affordable
camera (Fujifilm XP60). Much to my dismay, i find that the camera
cannot be told to take photos at regular intervals while aloft.
Holding down the trigger with a rubber band does not do it either. I
had just assumed that "take a picture every N seconds" would be a
standard camera feature, but as it turns out, it's actually somewhat
rare.
A long search and study of
dpreview.com shows that, in fact, there are
basically only 4 high-megapixel fixed-lens cameras which can take
pictures continuously (commonly called time-lapse, or more obscurely
as intervalometer):
1. Pentax Optio WG-2 (and WG-3), 16 MP, 192 g, $205 on amazon
2. Panasonic Lumix DMC-TS5, 16.1 MP, 214 g, $360 on amazon
3. Nikon Coolpix P510, 16 MP, (41.7× zoom!), 555 g, $370 on amazon
4. Ricoh GR, 16.2 megapixels, 3″ screen, 28 mm, 245 g, $800 on amazon
The first two are similar: cheap waterproof point-and-shoots.
The Nikon is the heavy one with the crazy zoom (not useful IMHO for aerials)
The Ricoh is the expensive one, with (one would assume) higher image
quality for that price.
A link which compares the four:
http://www.dpreview.com/products/compare/side-by-side?products=pentax_optiowg2&products=panasonic_dmcts5&products=nikon_cpp510&products=ricoh_gr&sortDir=ascending
All are 16 MP. I can confirm from my Fujifilm (also 16 MP) that just
because it's capturing that many pixels, it's not necessarily good
quality. So, spending more for the same MP can definitely be worth
it.
Does anyone here have experience with any of these cameras? Anyone
know exactly what intervals they support?
For my predicament here in Hawaii, I'm just going to strap my Galaxy
Nexus phone to my hexacopter and take 5 MP snapshots. Sigh.