Well - I have this GeoSnad tool mounted on my IR camera and it works quite well - but yes, the price is very high.
I have done such geotaging using the onboard Garmin GPX that is mounted in our aircraft and it is not difficult.
Just mount any of the cheep (and small) tracking devices (or sport watch with GPS) and log your track into a GPX file.
You have to synchronize the camera time with the GPS time - you can do this together with geotaging your images:
1. Take a picture of your GPS showing the precise time with the camera you use (if the track logger has a display)
2. Look at the picture and check the EXIF and compute the time difference
3. Use a software the will apply the time shift and will add the GPS coordinates from the GPX file (based on the corrected time)
I have tried several softwares and the best that work for is Zoner - check google for the workflow
Good luck.
Jan
Hello Jan,
Great to have actually found someone who has experience using the Geosnap module, are you using the Express or Pro (inc. IMU) module? I reckon we will eventually opt for a similar device, although we may pospone that to a moment later in time as the remainder of our rig has been paid for through projects. Until then, I am afraid a 'simple' but relatively high frequency (10Hz +) GPS logger and some post-process-geotagging will do.
Could you perhaps elaborate a bit more on the Geosnap module, how it works and how it fits within your workflow in a userfriendly manner? Do you trigger the camera using the module itself (by time or distance, for example), or do you use an external trigger (Time Lapse mode, mission planning app, etc.) for that and only use the Geosnap to record the position?
If using the Trigger by Distance on the Geosnap; how accurate is it? Or, does it deliver the precise spacing interval between images as you set it? I am a bit reluctant on that matter considering its a basic GPS system and I would rather not sacrifice my overlap.
Considering the geotagging, how does that precisely work? Does it immediately write the position data to the JPEG's EXIF file, or do you still require some post-processing. Also, does this geotagging only work when using the Geosnap for the triggering? Or would it also be possible for the Geosnap to 'read' when a trigger is initiated (through external means) and still write the position data after all?
Other than that, thanks for your input once again! I will certainly have a look at the Geosnap later on, unless some cheaper alternative/ Sony propietary solution has been released by then, and make good use of your tips and tricks!
Bob