McWannabe wrote:
No, I haven't tried a 3/4 or half-circle. I'm trying to capture dance moves which pretty much require a full view.
I can understand why you wish to keep the full circle. That said, I'm getting pretty good results with a slightly wider than 1/2; basically, the cameras are seeing enough around me to figure out what's going on. Also, I'm generally performing to the 'front', so I try to keep important motions visible to the 'audience.'
I am curious, however, to learn what the actual trade off is between full and semi-circle. With a full circle, you get full coverage of course. But with a semi-circle you may get more precision since the cameras are closer together. Will have to test that one of these days.
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When you have finished your calibration, are all the cameras lining up exactly?
I'm not exactly sure what you mean by 'lining up'. If you mean, do my virtual cameras correspond to the positions and angles of the real camera, then yes. Not all are exactly to the cm, but they're pretty close. (Remember I'm still using four cameras though, and haven't tested six yet.)
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Maybe I need to do much wider loops with the flashlight or something?
I should post one of my calibration videos as I've been consistently getting excellent iPi DMC calibration ratings everytime. My pattern is pretty simple: I draw a box starting with the farthest corner (from the 'front',) touching the ground for about a second for each bottom corner, and then I draw a spiral from the top of the 'box' down to a point at the bottom. This gives me five ground points. When I draw the box, I make very certain that the entire box is visible to all the cameras all the time. This is another advantage of doing a smaller the full circle setup--it means you don't have to do any crazy contortions to keep from occluding the maglite.
But as I've said, I'm still very curious to learn if a full circle will give me better results.
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BTW - what is the large yellow ball for that iPi seems to generate? Does it think that is a light source?
Yes, that's the program's light source. You should set this up under the Scene tab. I don't think it affects calibration, but if you set it up to match the lighting in your scene, it may help the tracker better understand what it's looking at. In my case, I'm lighting the performance almost equally from both sides and front so I position the light up and to the front.
Hope this helps.
G.