Hot wheels gopro
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Add the camera to the top of a classic toy redesigned just for the task. Every product on Fatherly is independently selected by our editors, writers, and experts. This week they launched the first ever GoPro-compatible Zoom In car. The new Hot Wheels Zoom In makes it all possible.
One box is the positive shape. With the GoPro mount stowed away, it just looks like a little cart.
Plunge, twist, and loop-the-loop — now you can ride along in your favorite Hot Wheels car! The Zoom In was developed with both Mattel and GoPro, and it's effectively a skateboard that a GoPro Hero Session or Hero5 Session attaches to. You spend hours setting up all the S-turns, death-drops, figure eights, and loop-de-loops for your. The beach one is great as well! I just received one of these Zoom In cars from Mattel, so I'll be taking it for a test drive soon -- stay tuned!
This Hot Wheels Car Might Be the Sweetest, Cheapest GoPro Accessory - Trust me it's an awesome deal. Mattel says the Hot Wheels Zoom In should be launched later this month.
The GoPro session is small enough to do this and YouTube creator 5MadMovieMakers has made some wonderful videos with this combination. I found a couple of tutorials for how to get this effect, and they work, but I wanted to make my own solution and with 3D printing I knew I could get it just the way I wanted it. The biggest tool you need here is a 3D printer. If you don't have one, this is an incredibly tiny print job so if you know someone who has one you could print it up in under half an hour. The Ultimaker 2 Go, pictured, is also fantastic, but has a higher price tag for a first printer. Use the drill to break this connection and you'll soon have two axles ready to go. Some cars have the axles going through the metal body. If this is the case, use a Dremel to free the wheels. Then measure the diameter of the wheels so you will know if you need to modify the print. Skip ahead to the printing for the file, but for now it's time to dive into the design. My goal was to get stable and nice-looking footage. hot wheels gopro So for stability I wanted the camera as low as possible. A lower camera means a lower center of gravity and less wobble and danger of toppling over. For nice-looking footage that can be how much of the wheels show up in the shot. Drop the camera down and you'll see more of the wheels. This is a matter of preference, though. The next part is also about preference. Putting a GoPro on a Hot Wheels track feels like just that, an action camera on a track. The background is in focus and items that are close are out of hot wheels gopro. The camera and mental focus is more on what's right in front of the car. I think this is a big help, but it's not needed. If you already have a preferred program this is easy to copy. When you take apart your car, measure the width of the body where the wheels were attached. This is how wide you should make the body. If the wheels are different sizes, the body will have different widths for each set of wheels and you may need a more complex shape or two body pieces. As for the length, that came roughly from this formula: wheel diameter + camera hot wheels gopro + lens thickness + 2mm margin. The GoPro should be held firmly in place so that the camera can't get nudged and start pointing to the side. This holder both fits the shape of the GoPro to keep it in place. In the second image you can see that shapes that were combined to make the holder. One box is the positive shape. Two cylinders and a box make up the GoPro hot wheels gopro. Two wedges are on each side to keep the shape close and avoid bumping into the walls of the track. Here are the axle holders for the car. The axle holder is taller with a negative shape underneath so that it's easy to change the height of the axle for different size wheels. If the wheel is bigger, lift it up. The void in the middle of the axle holder is a gap that makes it easier to slide the axles in. It allows you to be able to reach in with pliers the pull the axle all the way in. This worked when I needed it, but since there were so many prototypes I mostly didn't bother as I was constantly swapping the wheels around. Since it worked I didn't bother with variations, but that might help. After printing, slide the axles into place, attach the camera with some gaffer tape and you're good to go. Also, what I've found is that the footage you think will be amazing is often just confusing. hot wheels gopro Lots of quick turns don't make much sense without your own body getting moved around as well. Better to add context to stuff that has slower turns or hills. I barely had any room to work with with this track which was only 10' long or so. But crashes are always fun and I fit that in with only about half that track. As for a rollercoaster you could probably do that with a double rail system and concave plastic wheels. It can handle it, but loop footage isn't as exciting as you'd think. You just see the track rise up for a few frames since the regular loops are pretty small and fast. To get a bigger effect the loop would need to be at least a couple feet in diameter. Even then you're just seeing track. If I was to go after that I'd like to make a large set of two loops side by side. Then run the camera on one track to shoot a car on the other.