Analysis of Genuine Rod Photo (insert sarcasm here)
The “experts” tell us that the true mark of a genuine rod photo is one taken
at a high shutter speed. We know without any question at all, that slow shutter
speeds are unreliable, as slow shutter speeds distorts images. It distorts
insect images to the point that they look like rod photos or what some claim
are rod photos.
The experts claim that using a high shutter speed will eliminate the “bogus”
images. So here we have a genuine rod photo taken by an expert, Jeff Farris
one of the members of Jose Escamilla’s team. He stresses the point of taking
rod photos with high shutter speeds.
The fact that you can see the object going behind the telephone pole and wires
gives us a very good indication of it’s size.

We know that all video plays back at 30 frames per second regardless of what
shutter speed was used. This means if the two images, which have been merged
into the one image that you see here at the top, were taken 1/30 of a second
apart. We could assume the images were sequential; there is only about 4-6
feet between the images so it seems reasonable to assume they were sequential
frames.
The telephone pole and transformer are common objects that can be used to
determine size. Look over a telephone pole very carefully, they appeared to
be about 20 feet high, and the transformers are 1 ½ to 2 feet in height. Based
on this, the object that you see here is between 4-6 feet in length, perhaps
8-10 inches in width but it is hard to tell due to the blurring. What a minute,
did we say blurring? How did this image “blur” if Jeff was using a high shutter
speed per his protocol? Was the object seen here traveling thousands of mph,
faster then the “naked” eye could see?
There are at least two factors that dam this photo. The first detail is the
fact that the image is blurred at all; if it were taken at a high shutter
speed we would expect it to be in perfect focus. If it was taken at the shutter
speed recommended by Jeff and Jose of 1/10,000 of a second, the object, if
my math is right would of only traveled .012 of a foot in 1/10,000 of a second
or less then an inch.
In other words it would have moved so little during the time the shutter was
open that the object wouldn’t have appeared blurred at all. What ever this
object is would have been crystal clear, sharp, detailed and there would be
little doubt as to its identity.
The other damming datum is the arch that the object takes, the trajectory
that it follows. Notice the curved arrow that we added to the top photo. This
curve is consistence with the trajectory that an arrow or spear would take
if someone had thrown it over the transformer wires.
Now the experts claim that rods travel at thousands of mph, they might claim
that even though they used a high shutter setting the reason this photo is
blurred is because the object was traveling at such a high rate of speed.
Lets examine that for a moment, we know that all video plays back at 30 frames
per second, we know that the distance between the two objects, the distance
the object traveled between frames is a little less then it’s length.
So if we error on the low side and say the object traveled 4 feet in 1/30
of second all we have to do is multiply 4 feet by 30 equals 120 feet per second.
Which would be (120 feet X 60 seconds X 60 minutes) / 5280 = 81.8 or a little
less than 82 mph, not thousands of mph but only 82 mph. An object 4-6 feet
long traveling a little less then the speed of a fastball would certainly
be visible to the naked eye. A simple bow and arrow shot over the transformer
would follow this arch that this object follows, and would quite easily travel
on the slow side at least 82 mph.
So we have an object that appears to have been filmed at a slow shutter speed,
therefore the blurring is explained, and the object arches over the telephone
wire consistence with the manner that you would expect a spear or arrow to
follow. And the object we now know was traveling a paltry 82 mph. What we
have found by looking over a number of similar photos is that we see this
arch over and over again, indicating that someone is perhaps throwing spears
or shooting arrows into the air and someone filming them misidentifies them
as rods.
If these photos were taken using a high shutter speed as some have maintained
they were, we would see very little if any blurring. Strike one. If the object
was a rod we would expect the image to perhaps travel in a more liner fashion,
side to side, or even arch upwards some of the time, instead we always see
the same arch consistence with a thrown or launched object under the influence
of gravity. Strike two.
If these are of rods, which the experts claim travel thousands of mph, too
fast for the human eye to see, we would expect to come to a different conclusion
then the ones we have. Quite simply that this object is traveling at 82 mph,
the speed one would expect from a spear or slow arrow and one that would be
visible to human eyes. Strike three.
Our evaluation is that this photo shows nothing any stranger then a common
object some body tossed over a telephone wire, filmed it at a slow shutter
speed and claimed differently or was confused. We might add that a professional
videographer and an imaging expert both disagreed with our assessment here.
They both believed this image represented nothing more then a blurred insect
flying close to the lens of the camera.
|