Too interesting to not pass on...
Visible String Sine Waves?
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So that's what music looks like, cool.
Dave
Dave
tovo wrote:
I guess he might just have been, didn't do too badly although that thumb was way to prominent Lol Might be onto something as far as tuning goes thoughPretty cool indeed. Do you think he's a Clapton fan by any chance?
- neverfoundthetime
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How cool was that?
But what did we just see? Was it necessary for the camera to be inside the guitar looking out... won't it be the same filmed from outside? And why are we seeing the sine wave? SLow mo? Any science buffs with an answer... where's Wrench?
But what did we just see? Was it necessary for the camera to be inside the guitar looking out... won't it be the same filmed from outside? And why are we seeing the sine wave? SLow mo? Any science buffs with an answer... where's Wrench?
neverfoundthetime wrote:
How inquisitive you are, the force is within not without! You see it Mo Slow cos its Apple not Microsoft young ChrisHow cool was that?
But what did we just see? Was it necessary for the camera to be inside the guitar looking out... won't it be the same filmed from outside? And why are we seeing the sine wave? SLow mo? Any science buffs with an answer... where's Wrench?
Chasplaya wrote:
PAL Interlace scanning at 50Hz on Uk tvs fills in all the gaps along with persistance of vision in the human eye and brain in normal circumstances. Phones will scan differently.
Tom N.
It probably has to do with the field rate of the recording and playback.neverfoundthetime wrote:
How inquisitive you are, the force is within not without! You see it Mo Slow cos its Apple not Microsoft young Chris
PAL Interlace scanning at 50Hz on Uk tvs fills in all the gaps along with persistance of vision in the human eye and brain in normal circumstances. Phones will scan differently.
Tom N.
I have noticed this phenomenon for quite some time. If you hold your guitar in front of a television and sight across the strings, when you hit the string you should be able to see what appears to be a sine wave. At least it works on American cathode ray tube type televisions.