Like a dummy, I forgot to get glasses. But I did the "hole punched in paper" trick to show the GF. Not much to see as it's almost completely overcast here in eastern NM
Like a dummy, I forgot to get glasses. But I did the "hole punched in paper" trick to show the GF. Not much to see as it's almost completely overcast here in eastern NM
bobzilla said:what is with all these people having the day off? Wife's school district is closed. Many people's plants/factories closed. And I"m still sitting here in a windowless concrete box inside a windowless concrete box.
Work and school will be there tomorrow. Maybe if we let people do more silly E36 M3 like this they'll be a bit happier. I'm sitting outside like an idiot with paper glasses on and it's kinda fun.
Passed through peak (59%) here about a half hour ago. Completely cloudless sky. The light was strange, almost desaturated, and you could feel that it was cooler. You can really see it in my solar output, it's only just starting to come back. Went from 11.7 kW output to 5.0.
Mucked around with exposure settings and managed this. Another 15 minutes to totality here, expecting 90 percent.
Tom_Spangler (Forum Supporter) said:Galaxy S24 Ultra with the glasses held in front of the camera lens:
I couldn't figure out how to get a great picture like this with my phone. Then I realized that I have a Galaxy S8. Nuff said.
It is pretty freaky. It's like twilight, except the sun is still directly overhead. You can see why ancient people who didn't know was was going on would be freaked out by it.
Totally amazing. Could even see solar flares coming from the sun during totality. Picture suck compared to what we saw.
And when the sun came back, it was stunningly white.
We got some ok pictures. Of course we had black storm clouds during totality, but pretty great overall considering we didn't have to leave the house
volvoclearinghouse said:Bewildered bees. I was able to set my camera about 3" away from this guy, and he did not move.
Ours didn't seem to care approaching 59%, but I have to admit I didn't check too closely near the peak. I should have.
Took a half day and made it into the path of totality in a random parking lot in small town nowhere. Clouds cooperated at juuuuust the right time to see full totality. Completely worth it.
Took these out the office window with my cell phone camera sitting behind a pair of "eclipse glasses":
Came out better than expected!
WOW!
What an experience! Like standing at the edge of the Grand Canyon... No picture can do it justice.
We had ~4 minutes of totality, the temp went from 75 to 69...twilight type light on the East and West Horizons. It got about as dark as a full moon on a clear night, except for the horizons.
Now I understand why people travel long distances to go see the total eclipse!
Wally (Forum Supporter) said:bobzilla said:what is with all these people having the day off? Wife's school district is closed. Many people's plants/factories closed. And I"m still sitting here in a windowless concrete box inside a windowless concrete box.
Work and school will be there tomorrow. Maybe if we let people do more silly E36 M3 like this they'll be a bit happier. I'm sitting outside like an idiot with paper glasses on and it's kinda fun.
Agreed. I was having a two star day at best, boss suddenly said 'we have nothing going on that can't wait til tomorrow' and called it at like 1. I kind of felt bad for the ppl who couldn't get away. Back in 2017 I was on jury duty; the judge called for a break so we could all go out and see it.
Like 3 min after totality, this C130 came over, looks like they found a way to move themselves to the totality zone 👍.
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