Mike Leigh Torres(@MikeLeighTorres) 's Twitter Profile Photo

@xavierdanielw Wonder of Science its frame rate that makes it seem stationary. It's shutter speed that makes the blade look clear and not a blur.

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Nick Murphy(@nickmurftweets) 's Twitter Profile Photo

@xavierdanielw Wonder of Science The specific FPS is why the blades are caught at the ‘same’ position. But plenty of shutter speeds would capture a sharp blade. You were wrong. It’s no big deal but you happen to have been wrong. Let it go

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Nick Murphy(@nickmurftweets) 's Twitter Profile Photo

@xavierdanielw Wonder of Science Oh this is getting daft. You’re wrong, and your failure to understand is never more clear than in what you’ve just said about the bushes. 😂 But I suggest you just go on believing you’re right and have a nice weekend.
Best wishes.

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Nick Murphy(@nickmurftweets) 's Twitter Profile Photo

@xavierdanielw Wonder of Science Haha, I did.
btw It’s phone shot, not an open/close shutter; it digitally ‘sweeps’ across the chip (why the rotors appear to bend a bit). It happens to record a frame exactly once every blade rotation, so the blades are in the same position each frame.
I’m done. Blocking next. :)

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