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Using the Kickstarter balloon mapping kit

My Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science (PLOTS) balloon kit came with a bunch of parts:

The included instructions provided some helpful tips, but a few important things were left to the imagination.

In a big way, that's okay. After a bit of fretting — why do they say there's a spare swivel clip when I seem to need all three…? — it dawned on me that the goal was simply to get my camera a thousand feet into the sky (and back again). The kit provides a good set of high quality materials to git'erdun.

The airship

Helium

Unless you want to mess with hydrogen as a lifting gas, and you don't, you'll need some helium to get your little ship in the air. A party store or supermarket might have some, or call up local "welding supply" and "industrial gas" dealers since you'll be needing plenty. The Industrial Gas Suppliers Alliance has an online directory of members organized by state. In the Tri-Cities area I'd recommend the Oxarc store near the train yard in Pasco, as the staff has been friendly and helpful.

Valve beneath safety cap on helium tank

Helium is sold by volume, and they have a variety of tank sizes available. The PLOTS kit's 5.5ft balloon has a maximum capacity of 87 cuft of helium (that's over 5.5 lbs gross lift!) but can get a lighter payload airborne with significantly less gas. I went with their 110 cuft tank so I could . At current prices, they charge around $60 to fill this size. They do loan tanks for just a few dollars on top if you'll return them promptly, but after doing that once I "bought" a tank for in the ballpark of a hundred dollars (almost a glorified deposit, as you simply exchange tanks for a refill, and can sell it back when you're done). This way I can have it handy whenever better weather returns, and also keep it around until I've emptied it completely — whether you buy or borrow the tank there's no refund for leftover gas.

Filling and closing

All you really need is the helium canister and a first officer to help with the whole flight. (It'd be possible to balloon alone, but riskier and way less fun!) The Grassroots Mapping guides cover the pre-flight and filling steps reasonably well, e.g. test the canister valve first and whatnot.

Small/medium-sized balloon nozzle on regulator/pressure gage

Oxarc is loaning me this regulator until they can track down and order whatever "backroom part" they replaced the filling nozzle with. It's really not a necessary expense — when I fill the big balloon it goes straight on the valve built into the tank. Using the tank valve directly speeds the process while still providing enough control over its 2000 psi contents. I'm splurging on the regulator set just to better monitor the fill level, and to make the tank more versatile for smaller balloons.

One last note on the helium tank: see that metal lid I'm holding in the first picture? That's called a safety cap. For a reason. Make sure it's securely in place whenever you move/transport the tank or balance it upright. If that top valve gets cracked off, there's a good chance you'll quickly have a much more dangerous freezing-cold steel airship flying through your garage. Respect the pressure.

Fill the balloon at a moderate pace. If you're too impatient you'll just put extra strain the chloroprene. Soon after you start, the balloon will be able to lift its own weight so it's best to communicate well with your helper so the balloon doesn't get loose. The balloon's diameter will correspond to the lift you're aiming for (you can find Lift Tables scattered around) but as you're filling its almost easier just to pay attention to the tug you're getting.

Three reusable zip ties holding a ring in place around the balloon's neck

Read the step-by-step instructions for this closing method, but it's pretty self explanatory from the pictures. The kit's zip ties are reusable — very nice for later refills, though I tend to bump the release clips as I tighten them down.

As soon as you've got the balloon tied up you'll want to moor it: tie a piece of kite line between a milk jug (or two if it's breezy) and the carabiner, then gently clip it onto the ring. That way you can turn most of your attention to the final camera setup and fastener checks.

A payload

Canon EOS 350D rigging

PLOTS has a series of videos and photos demonstrating how to secure a smartphone or camera inside a plastic bottle. I followed the basic process for my Palm Pre 2 (plus some trimming to improve the view) and ad libbed a harness for my EOS 350D using the strap loops and a bolt in the tripod mount.

Palm Pre 2 crash cage

Crash cage design

I suspect the crash cage itself may come into play a little more with kites than balloons, but there are still many good reasons to stick with something inspired by the PLOTS design.

The general strategy is:

Again, the main goal is to just get a camera safely suspended in the air.

Various rigging tips

The kite string tends to fray rather quickly once you've cut it. After every cut, I wave a lighter flame near (not directly touching — if it catches fire you're doing it wrong) to heat each of the new ends and gently melt them back.

Fusing the ends of the string to prevent fraying

The swivel clips are indeed clips! Don't be tricked. If you put enough force into them they will actually, eventually unclip. Maybe I'm just a wimp, but the rubber gloves (more on those later) do actually help quite a bit here, with the unfastening and refastening of clips.

I'm not quite sure how the PLOTS crew are getting by with only two swivel clips. I have one tied securely on the end of the main spool of line (it's a rather important knot!) and then used the other two on the ends of a few feet of clipped-off string. The main line goes on the kite, and I tie a loop in it where I clip one end of the short line. The other end gets clipped to the two bottle top loops and also the backup camera line. (Unless the band breaks, the full weight of the camera is normally lassoed to the "hook" along the bottle's bottom edge.)

Camera line clipped on main line's loop

While I've rigged mine a little differently (attaching the main line's swivel clip directly to the ring that's zip tied on the balloon nozzle, and then that double-ended camera rig line to a tied-off loop below that) you may find it helpful to watch Mathew's Launching a Grassroots Mapping Aerial Photography Rig video as well.

Camera notes

Rather than tape down the shutter with a rock, I simply program each camera to take pictures every few seconds.

For my Pre 2, I use Time Lapse Camera along with GPS Tracker in the background. I'd recommend thorough testing with both on the ground first. Learn which buttons do what in GPS Tracker, and when (you only seem to be able to write in-memory GPS logs to its tracks database once). Also note that if you don't give a name to your set in Time Lapse Camera, it will silently overwrite photos in the previous session. For unlocking the phone and starting the camera sequence, it turns out my Cosmonaut stylus has applications in suborbital endeavours too:

Using a stylus to touch the screen while rigged up in its bottle

The balloon does pretty well with my old Canon Rebel XT (350D) too. I've documented instructions for installing the CHDK-like firmware hack previously, and now would add to that just one note: if you set the interval too short, the hacked firmware may stop snapping mid-flight. I'm pretty sure that it's a "camera memory buffer vs. card speed" issue. Make sure your card can keep up 100%, with my particular card 3 seconds works, otherwise the incoming pictures will slightly outpace the card write speed, eventually (even many many frames later) the buffer will fill, and the hacked intervalometer won't resume until you start pressing buttons back on the ground.

Another view of the big camera rig, with GPS attached

With the balloon filled enough to haul this big rig, I can also strap my lightweight old Garmin Foretrex unit onto the bottle with no noticeable impact. Finally a real use for the sideways visualizations in that "map as fake 3D globe" software!

Flight tracks in virtual globe software

Don't be afraid to experiment, and also don't be afraid to check your knots and rubber bands one last time before letting the camera go. The constant clicking may be distracting, but remind yourself the camera will have plenty of time in the air too — if it's tied on well.

There and back again

Airship heading towards the clouds

When you're ready, when you've done a low-altitude test flight and then re-checked all the riggings — let 'er rip! The balloon can be really eager to fly and so long as you remain in control it doesn't hurt to let the line off fast. The end of my line was tied to itself around the spool, but you might want to verify yours to make sure. I'm tempted to draw some marks on my line for various altitudes, and to indicate when I need to start slowing the spool down towards the end.

Except for dealing with those swivel clips, I've found the provided rubber-coated work gloves a pain — not only do they literally stink, but they also stink for most rope handling. The rubber is too sticky, and often binds up on the winder and the string causing everything to screech to a halt. Then when the string does get going again, it tends to quickly turn the rubber into sticky blue powder. I do very highly recommend some sort of gloves though. You won't be able to let out or bring back the line well without tearing up your hands. Leather might work nicely, or if you're going for fashion why not try a fine pair of large yellow farmhand gloves?

Balloon at end of long line

Now that you've got 1000 feet of line out in the air, it's time to start thinking about how you intend to wind it all back in. But that's another post.

For more information

The other thing I've completely skipped over in this post is what to do with the aerial maps — and occasional landscape photography! — you bring back down.

View from the sky

The short answer is "I'm not sure, but they sure are cool!"

I hope this was a helpful overview of one way to use the balloon mapping kit, and also encouragement that it's just a relatively cheap balloon, some string and some rubber bands — hook them together and have some fun! There's even more information and tips and examples and inspiration over at Grassroots Mapping and the PLOTS Research Notes.

Update 2012-April-09: when I first published this post I used a completely made up name for the PLOTS endeavour; somehow I got the name confused with the Public Library of Science. Sorry for such sloppiness. It should be fixed now except for the embarrassing permalink.

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Numbers.app spreadsheet template for 2011 IRS Form 1040

This post is relevant to you only if all of the following apply:

Download the 2011 Tax Year version of the Numbers spreadsheet I'm using to help me prepare my federal tax return.

2011 Form 1040 example

IMPORTANT: you may NOT rely on this spreadsheet template for anything important. I am not a lawyer/accountant/federal agent/crook. See page 942 of the instructions.

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Been busy ballooning

We've been busy ballooning the past few days.

Getting the balloon set for its first flight, with my father-in-law

It's been a great adventure, one my family (including parents from out of town) has been joining in on. I'm especially indebted to my father-in-law, who's helped me figure out and even make very significant improvements to the balloon kit.

Maiden voyage shot, people laying on ground watching visible blurry through edge of bottle in frame

The images are starting to turn out a little better each flight. I started by lofting my Palm Prē 2 into the sky.

Island in lake at local Park of the Lakes, blurry shot from smartphone camera high above

I found both a decent timelapse app and GPS logger for it, and it's an option for smaller helium fills due to its low weight. Unfortunately, most apps for this ill-fated smartphone platform are kind of half-baked, as I found when my phone ran out of battery halfway through the flight. The photos up to that point were fine, but the tracklog seems to have been stored in volatile memory only. Little bugs that could be worked around if the phone's fuzzy little camera sensor is adequate for the scenery.

But it turns out this balloon can heft my DSLR and GPS unit pretty handily. Bigger sensor, better glass, and more reliable location logger!

It was too windy, but we managed to get both a low-altitude test flight and a short, nerve-wracking full-string-length cruise in today:

Neighbors' front lawns and a driveway An oblique view down the street Playground and landscaping viewed from above, darkly after dusk

One of the wind's few benefits is the occasional oblique shot — sometimes the camera momentarily defies gravity and gets whipped towards the horizon. Kind of scary to watch helplessly from below, and usually just results in blurred images, but now and then there's an interesting landscape photograph or two that winds up coming back down.

This is just the tip of the iceberg. Our cameras have taken many thousands of shots in the last three days, and at least 0.8% of them seem to have turned out!

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Playing around

"You know, what they think of you is so fantastic, it's impossible to live up to it. You have no responsibility to live up to it!"

Feynman then "went on to work out equations of wobbles" and it did work out.

I'm struggling with no such renown as Feynman, but the world I live in is still rather intimidating.

As analysts ooh and ahh over resolutions and stock buybacks, as the others bring their latest data centers online, and while so-and-so's multimillion dollar attempt to compete with really-is-great's dominant market share makes the news again — it's impossible to live up to it.

So who cares? My career has netted me an approximate financial worth of negative one house…plus a canister of helium!

A balloon made from a thin plastic fruit bag and a bread clip

This wannabe balloon experiment is ugly, it leaks badly, it's needed rescue from the trash once already. No honorary doctorate here. We're having fun:

It floats!

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Up coming new hobby

Spring is here, and with it the wind and my balloon mapping kit!

Probably not the best combo, but dealing with a bit of gusty weather is just one of many things I'll need to learn more about.

Toby imagining the new green balloon afloat Big glove hands while dad learns about pop bottle/rubber band rigging

I'd long been interested in messing about with something like Kite Aerial Photography to gather public domain orthoimagery. I never quite could believe that a kite would be very convenient for the task though. A big balloon seemed like a better idea, but I wasn't really sure exactly if or how to best accomplish that.

I also have a tendency to collect tools and instruments and spare parts for all sort of intended hobbies, but then they always end up on the back burner. Sitting at my desk or on the couch working on the big "make software better" project is about the only hobby that's been truly habit-forming, so I've mostly learned to avoid "investing" in gadget acquisition syndrome elsewhere. So long as my laptop stays running, I've got all the workbench I actually use. At least…until the kids are old enough to appreciate other hobbies — I've been telling myself to leverage procrastination talent against my microeconomic weakness.

Well two-and-a-half years old is enough to appreciate a big colorful helium balloon, eh? I jumped on the recent "balloon kit" Kickstarter campaign to kickstart a hobby that will require spending sunny Saturdays outside in the fresh air.

I'm still not entirely sure how to "accomplish" balloon mapping, but I've got a basic start on rigging up a camera and have already started pestering the local industrial gas supplier with newbish questions concerning just how I might fill our first airship with helium.

Shots taken while testing the safety cage rig

More details as this story develops!

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