sweetkb713
Scholar
- Joined
- Mar 21, 2004
- Messages
- 115
waitew said:Sweet,if it's a digital camera,why do you keep saying you have it on 'film'??
Sorry. I didn't realize I had to be so technical. Film students call everything film.
waitew said:Sweet,if it's a digital camera,why do you keep saying you have it on 'film'??
Fillipo Lippi said:
My point - teachers get bored
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:I'm confused about some things. Do these cameras have a physical power switch that cannot be controlled by a remote? Does the camera also have a standby/online switch? Can it be controlled by the remote?
How can you see this on the video? Is the physical switch flipping back and forth? If not, what do you mean by the camera turning on and off?[/B]
Well, that's certainly interesting. You can see the switch set to OFF. Then what happens that makes you think the camera turns on? A display comes on? Lights blink?SKB said:
The camera is switched to off. You can see that it's switched to off. And then the camera turns on without the switch turning to camera or playback.
sweetkb713 said:
Yes, there is a physical switch. It cannot be controlled by any remote control. You can turn a camera on if it is in a power save mode, but the switch has to be flipped to camera first. If the switch is flipped to off, it is OFF.
The camera is switched to off. You can see that it's switched to off. And then the camera turns on without the switch turning to camera or playback.
WildCat said:
When I wsas little I'd play tricks on my sister like that, I'd have a second remote and change her channel on her. It took her quite a while to figure it out, she was going nuts thinking the TV was broke.
WildCat said:Even if the teacher didn't give out the remotes, someone could have had their own remote (often the same remote works for different models by the same company, or it could be a universal remote). Make that DID have their own remote, lots of fun to do that in a "haunted" house.
I'll bet if you cover up the remote sensor on the camera w/ black tape the "ghosts" will go away.
sweetkb713 said:They haven't said anything about going back. It's a private business, and I don't know if the owners would want other students just tramping around running experiments. But it does warrent some investigation.
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:
Well, that's certainly interesting. You can see the switch set to OFF. Then what happens that makes you think the camera turns on? A display comes on? Lights blink?
And you're absolutely sure that I can't turn the camera on with a remote, even with the switch set to OFF?
~~ Paul
Jaggy Bunnet said:
Anyone checked if the switch (or the connections from the switch are loose/faulty?
Joshua Korosi said:
YES, it warrants investigation!!!
One thing I get tired of is people coming out with stories like the one you've been told, of fantastic unexplained physical phenomena and effects, and hearing the story end with "we won't ever go back there". I don't understand those people. A camera, with a physical circuit breaking switch set firmly to OFF, suddenly turns on and starts working by itself? Excessive power drains unique to a physical location? And then, no further interest in the site at all? "Oh, ho-hum, that's weird, but let's go home"? I think not.
OK, to make this 100% clear, there is video of a camera, whose record switch is clearly marked in the "OFF" position, whose "viewfinder" suddenly comes on, whilse the record switch is still clearly in the "OFF" position. I'm guessing by viewfinder that you mean the digital LCD display of what the camera is seeing. Is that right?sweetkb713 said:
The camera turned on because you can see through the viewfinder. Come on, Paul, don't be thick.
Yes, you can't turn the camera on when it is set to off. I am positive.
Yup, I'm thick, because I don't understand this statement at all. Hagrok and I would both like clarification.SKB said:
The camera turned on because you can see through the viewfinder.
Note that that I'm not trying to be a jerk here. It's just that it's impossible to formulate an opinion without more information. As the saying goes, the Devil's in the Details.Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:
Yup, I'm thick, because I don't understand this statement at all. Hagrok and I would both like clarification.
~~ Paul
Hand Bent Spoon said:After reading all the possibilities here, to me it seems there are three possibilities, from most likely to least (IMO):
1. They faked it. Graduate film students + haunted location = "Hey, I have an idea!" Also, the location seems to be run by a person with a stake in its haunted reputation. Think you can't be fooled? Then you're the easiest to fool of all.
2. Interference. Electrical, magnetic, whatever. Something was interfering with the proper operation of the cameras.[/B]
sweetkb713 said:
I'm not trying to sway you. I'm not saying it's paranormal. I'm asking WHAT IT COULD BE. Please don't jump to conclusions about me.
Uhhh, Huhhh..Obsessing about one specific thing is a general "debunker" tactic.
Diogenes said:
Uhhh, Huhhh..
So, in what other circumstances have you found yourself at odds with "debunkers" ?
P.S.
In our experience, obsessing about one specific thing is a general " woo- woo" tactic ...![]()
sweetkb713 said:
They haven't said anything about going back. It's a private business, and I don't know if the owners would want other students just tramping around running experiments. But it does warrent some investigation.
waitew said:Sweet,if it's a digital camera,why do you keep saying you have it on 'film'??