Clear Skies for Some HD Aerial Producers
March 29, 2009
by George Winslow — Multichannel News, March 25, 2009
As a specialist in aerial photography, Ron Chapple knows a lot about bad weather and dangerous conditions, having shot footage in typhoons, volcanoes, hurricanes and wild fires for The Discovery Channel’s Raging Planet series. Yet, Aerial Filmworks’ president and aerial director of photography is reporting relatively little turbulence from the economic maelstrom that has been buffeting the TV production sector. “It is amazing how much work we have,” he said. “If this is a recession, I want more of it.”
Their experience illustrates how some companies have been able to thrive in a tough economic climate by finding low-cost ways of producing high-quality HD footage.
Aerial Filmworks specializes in aerial photography, using the Cineflex V14HD camera system from Axsys Technologies. The system has a stabilization system that was originally developed for the military that allows them to shoot extremely high-quality HD images, Chapple said. Yet it is relatively lightweight and can be easily mounted on helicopters and operated by a single camera person, thus reducing the cost of high-definition aerial photography.
Aerial Filmworks owns three of these camera systems, which it also rents out to qualified operators. It has worked on shoots for such clients as Pioneer Productions (which is producing the Raging Planet series), Disney Kids, ESPN, PBS, the Maui Chopper series on TruTV and has done work for the snowboarding film “That’s It That’s All”.
The Cineflex V14HD camera system uses a Sony HDC-1500 high-def camera that is mounted inside a round ball. An operator inside the helicopter controls the camera with a joy stick. Typically, Chapple shoots in 1080p at 23.98 or 29.97 frames per second and records the footage on Sony CineAlta SRW1/SRPC-1 HDCAM SR decks.

Rainbow through the cockpit window of a Bell 206B3 Jet Ranger on the turbulent east coast of Taiwan.
The camera has a five-axis stabilization system, that Chapple said produces clear steady pictures even in severe weather.
While in Taiwan shooting sequences in the Taroko Gorge for Raging Planet, Chapple noted that “regardless of the wind conditions you can continue to shoot because of the stabilization. The winds will come from one direction and then half a mile later you’ll get hit with winds from another direction. But the camera just stays rock-solid the whole time.”
On a number of shoots, the camera system also allowed them to get high-quality HD pictures from a considerable distance. “When we were shooting the California wildfires, you really don’t want to be hovering directly over the flames that can be 100 feet high or more,” Chapple noted. “But we were able to sit at a safe distance about a quarter of a mile away and zoom in on the flames.”
The camera is also lighter and easier to install than other aerial photographic systems on the market, Chapple said. Aerial Filmworks leases a helicopter near the location and send only one operator/tech on a shoot, which reduces costs. “We just show up with four or five cases and within an hour the operator can rig it up and we’re ready to fly,” Chapple said. “Being able to go out with just one person and work on a variety of helicopters really helps keep production costs down and that has kept us very busy.”
Jeff Nestel-Patt, director of corporate marketing at Axsys Technologies, adds that the system’s ability to produce high-quality HD images with lower production costs has kept it in high demand among documentary film makers.
Link to original article on Multichannel News.
© 2009 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
CBS “Survivor” Contracts Aerial Filmworks to Provide Cineflex V14 HD System
March 2, 2009

Mark Hryma of Flyboy Pictures flies the Cineflex V14 HD system in Brazil on the set of Survivor: Tocantins.
The newest CBS season of “Survivor: Tocantins” used a Cineflex V14 HD from Aerial Filmworks. Aerial DP and camera operator Mark Hryma worked with the system for 7 weeks in the Highlands of Brazil. Footage from the integrated Sony CineAlta HDC-1500 camera was captured to a Sony XDCAM recording deck.
~Mark Hyrma, Aerial Director of Photography

The Aerial Filmworks team arranged the international export permits from the US State Department and hand-delivered the camera to the remote location. While on-site, Gray Mitchell, installed the system and modified the Eurocopter AS350 to precisely fit the Airfilm AFSP helicopter mount.
About Aerial Filmworks
Aerial Filmworks provides high-definition video Cineflex camera systems and services to the international entertainment, documentary and corporate marketplace. Highly regarded by award-winning clients, the Cineflex V14 HD provides the highest level of image gyro-stabilization. Aerial Filmworks is a highly responsive company with over 20 years of aerial photography and filming experience. Dedicated to providing Cineflex HD systems and services, experienced aerial filming crews work on location over 200 days a year.
Aerial Filmworks is a TerraPass White Badge partner continually investing in Carbon Offset credits to preserve a carbon neutral footprint.





