Spectacular race of a cheetah collected at 1,200 fps with Phantom
Thanks to the use of the Phantom camera, never before seen images of these animals running at 95 km/hour have been achieved.
National Geographic and the Cincinnati Zoo have launched a spectacular production, framed within the conservation project of big cats such as the cheetah, Cause an Uproar.
Thanks to the use of the Phantom camera, never-before-seen images of these animals, the fastest on the planet, have been achieved. The production team captured the detail of the race at 1,200 frames per second, capturing all the nuances of the feline's movement at 95 km/hour.
The extraordinary material collected is the result of recording five cheetahs during three days of filming.
The Phantom Camera has completely transformed the slow motion techniques used until now thanks to its versatility and lightness (just 5.33 kilos). This has allowed the camera to be placed on a high-speed tracking shot, obtaining incredible images.
This camera records at a resolution of 2560x1600 pixels with a capture of 1,450 images per second. If the resolution used was 1080p, you can capture 2,560. Finally, if we record at a resolution of 720p, the Phantom unleashes its full potential and captures 5,850 images per second. The camera is sold with three storage options: 8, 16 and 32GB.
[vimeo]http://vimeo.com/53914149[/vimeo]
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