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LAST UPDATED: Jan 24, 2012 10:52:47 AM
Issue 17
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The guy who shot JDR's Dream Ride slow-mo

Capturing some of the surfing industry's most creative angles is a walk in the park for Delinquent Digital Cinema, Andrew 'Shorty' Buckley. Typically swanning around Indonesia and Hawaii wielding a 500mm lens, Shortly found himself amidst the tropical heat of North Queensland in November 2011, filming an industry first - JDR KTM's Dream Ride. Seeing as though Delinquent Digital Cinema is based in the same Sydney premises as Transmoto, we caught up with Shorty to talk about popping his moto cherry.

Shorty shot JDR's dream ride on the Phantom Flex - a 2000+FPS camera that will blow your mind

In terms of projects you've been a part of in the past, was JDR's Dream Ride up there?
AS: Oh man, it was bloody amazing. I mean, I've worked on some big projects before, but if the sun's out at the track you can basically nail your job on the spot. Surfing is a little different; you're usually booked for two weeks - waiting for the right swell, tide and wind direction. The fact is, the whole thing was so well organised, we were totally looked after and the custom-built track was absolutely insane. Malcolm Stewart and Josh Cachia were throwing down some seriously gnarly shit. In essence, JDR was pretty ambitious with what they wanted to get out of it, considering none of them had worked with the equipment that was used. At the end of it all, we nailed the three-day timeframe and I worked my ring off with so much content to file at the end of the day. The results speak for themselves; total team effort.

On the topic of equipment, the shoot was essentially an industry first. Why was that?
In an off-road situation - as far as I've been able to tell - it's first time, ever, that so much advanced equipment was in one place. Basically there was a brand new Red Epic, a brand new Phantom Flex, seven Zeiss primes - which are just amazing glass - and then we had a 300mm and a 150-500mm PL mount Canon lenses. And that doesn't even include all the support gear that goes with it: the rails, rods, tri-pods, batteries, computers - the list was almost endless. I think there was a total of nine huge waterproof Pelican cases full of gear that was loaded onto a truck and driven from Sydney to Cairns. It would've easily cost in excess of $10,000 to fly it there.

Does filming with the Phantom Flex and Red Epic require a different scene set-up and frame setting approach?
Definitely. Because we were breaking new ground and I was the only person there familiar with using a Phantom Flex, it was a steep learning curve for everyone. The majority of the time I was shooting with the Flex at around 1600 frames per second at 2K resolution - current cinema quality. Unlike other cameras, you can't just hit the record button when you see something insane going down. It's a process of choosing what to capture, timing when to start the Flex's engine and then transferring those recorded files from its ram to the hard drive manually - before resetting it all again. Over the three days the guys kind of joked that I only worked four seconds at a time! And to put it into perspective, four seconds of Flex footage at 1600fps rendered into real-time 25fps video, translates to roughly 10 minutes of footage. In total I reckon I recorded around two hours of raw Flex footage. The hard drives required to store the Flex's footage alone, was unreal.

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RACE RESULTS

MX Nats, MX1, Rd 4, Wanneroo

Place Rider Pts
1
Josh Coppins
72
2
Lawson Bopping
57
3
Todd Waters
56

MX Nats, MX2, Rd 4, Wanneroo

Place Rider Pts
1
Luke Styke
68
2
Cheyne Boyd
62
3
Adam Monea
55

AMA SX, Supercross, Rd 17, Las Vegas

Place Rider Pts
1
Ryan Dungey
25
2
David Millsaps
22
3
Justin Brayton
20

AMA SX, West Coast Lites, Rd 9, Las Vegas

Place Rider Pts
1
Eli Tomac
25
2
Dean Wilson
22
3
Wil Hahn
20

AMA SX, East Coast Lites, Rd 9, Las Vegas

Place Rider Pts
1
Justin Barcia
25
2
Ken Roczen
22
3
Blake Baggett
20

AMA SX, East/West Shootout

Place Rider Pts
1
Justin Barcia
25
2
Eli Tomac
22
3
Martin Davalos
20

World MX Championship, MX1, Rd 4, Mexico

Place Rider Pts
1
Tony Cairoli
45
2
Clement Desalle
44
3
David Philippaerts
36

World MX Championship, MX2, Rd 4, Mexico

Place Rider Pts
1
Jeffrey Herlings
50
2
Tommy Searle
44
3
Jeremy van Horebeek
40

Transmoto 12-Hour

Place
Name
Laps
1
Yeah Almost
27
2
Detour 1 X
27
3
FLYING FOUR SKINS
26
4
Sportscamera.com.au
26
5
MX1 Australia X
26
6
KTM Trail Tours
25
7
Komatsu
24
8
Bathurst boys
24
9
Brothers Behind Bars
24
10
Tough gear
24

Melbourne Enduro-X, Pro Class

Place Rider Pts
1
Toby Price
70
2
Chris Hollis
65
3
Jack Field
50
4
Ben Grabham
49
5
Tim Coleman
47
6
Chris Davey
44
7
Ben Burrell
42
8
Glenn Kearney
41
9
Mitch Harper
39
10
Scott Keegan
37

Dakar Rally

Place Name Time
1
Despres (FRA)
43:28:11
2
Coma (ESP)
44:21:31
3
Rodrigues (PRT)
44:39:28
4
Viladoms (ESP)
45:09:07
5
Svitko (SVK)
45:15:39
6
Ullevalseter (NOR)
45:15:39
7
Farres Guell (ESP)
45:40:07
8
Botturi (ITA)
46:27:15
9
Pain (FRA)
46:46:01
10
Zanol (BRA)
46:54:07

2011 X-Fighters, Australia, September 17

Place Rider Pts
1
Josh Sheehan
100
2
Levi Sherwood
80
3
Dany Torres
65
4
Mike Mason
55
5
Rob Adelberg
45
6
Adam Jones
35
7
Maikel Melero
30
8
Todd Potter
25
9
Matt Schubring
20
10
Cam Sinclair
15

2011 X-Fighters, Final Championship Standings

Place Rider Pts
1
Dany Torres
390
2
Nate Adams
375
3
Andre Villa
270
4
Josh Sheehan
230
5
Blake Williams
215
6
Eigo Sato
185
7
Levi Sherwood
180
8
Adam Jones
160
9
Robbie Maddison
160
10
Maikel Melero
145
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