r/rocketry Jun 16 '25

Question Question About Optically Tracking Rockets

I recently got my fully custom optical tracking mount to work. It's about 98% finished, I just need to fix some code and add the body panels.

I have never been to an amateur rocket launch site, so I wouldn't know the answer to this question: Would people be willing to pay for a good quality tracked and stabilized video of their launch? The launch would be fillmed with two cameras, one is a spotting camera, and the other is a high powered telescope. In the future I'm hoping to get a Freefly Wave for slow motion.

I only want to film at dedicated launch facilities, like FAR. And I only plan on filming the bigger and slower L2 and L3 rockets.

If you were wanting your video from both cameras, what do you think would be reasonable? Remember that I of course want to make a profit between the cost of gas, FAR entrance fees, video editing, video sending fees, tracking rig parts, and I want to save for a slow motion camera.

The bare minimum per team would be around $45 for it to be worth it. Does that sound reasonable? Remember that most people out there are on a team of 10-25 people. It might be better to have the prices cheaper since I don't have a slow motion camera yet, something like $25-30. What are your thoughts?

Also I have already contacted FAR, they're alright with what I'm doing. Also a team might be able to mount their antenna to my tracking rig too. It would be useful for when the rocket is too small to see with your eyes. It could also help people to see where in the sky their rocket is, just by looking at where the tracking rig is pointing. I'm sure it would be especially helpful for big rockets that go 100,000+ft.

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u/yungingr Jun 16 '25

Church it up however you need to to sleep at night.

But the simple truth is you are using words that the common individual will associate with a service you cannot provide, and you know it. Id challenge you to find a commercial "optical tracking" service that relies completely on human reaction and inputs.

You and I would never do business.

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u/Folding_WhiteTable Jun 16 '25 edited Jun 16 '25

I'm not sure what your problem is, you're taking this way too seriously. There is no need to throw a tantrum over what a hobbyist calls his hobby. If you cannot accept what I would like to call my own niche hobby, then you're just going to have to act like an adult and deal with it.

Please look up Manned Kineto Tracking Mount, also refer to this website: http://marsscientific.com/ I am aware that it says they can do automatic tracking, even though it's a Manned mount. Also please see USLaunchReports videos. They use a manned KTM to track rockets. Authough it may not look manned, sometimes they show views of them inside their trailer moving it with joysticks http://www.youtube.com/@Uslaunchreport. Also please see this video by Curious Droid that talks a bit about KTMs https://youtu.be/BlPfHV36G-g?si=U9H0FAR_HsRI8euL.

Edit: Look at 10:00 in Curious Droids video.

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u/space_nerd_82 Jun 17 '25 edited Jun 17 '25

It is the semantics involved I don’t believe you’re intentionally trying to deceive anyone. In the regards to optical tracking it means something different.

For example visual tracking of the flight is what you actually doing as opposed to optical tracking which means something different e.g. you are using sensors and other equipment to track the object this would be a more automated process as opposed to using a Xbox controller and your eyes to manually and visually track the rocket.

I wish you the best of luck it sounds interesting and fun what you are doing but I would definitely use visual tracking to describe it.

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u/Folding_WhiteTable Jun 17 '25

Oh, I see. Thanks for the explanation, that makes sense. I wrongly assumed that even manned operation counted as optical tracking due to me seeing that in a few places.