Hi Bruce,
After posting the above, I looked through my HDD for a scan of one of the photos that I know I have 'somewhere', but couldn't locate it
The aim was to shoot a "milk drop crown", something like this (not mine, or I'd have shown it here).
Trying to initiate a milk drip and press shutter at same time, in the hope they coincide at the right time is just far too random to be viable with film (or even digital, if you value your sanity, I suggest).
I know; let's open the shutter, make a drip, trigger the flash, then close the shutter.
Hmm, a few problems there ...
I will need to do this in the complete dark because I don't want ambient light exposing the film/sensor while I'm doing the dripping business.
So the first challenge is ensuring the drips always land in the middle of the saucer.
I had a saucer of milk and directly above it, mounted on a structure of some Heath Robinson fabrication, were an "eye dropper" ("pipette" is the technical name I think) also filled with a little milk and also a photo beam sensor thing which I connected to my trigger delay box (simplified example of a circuit). This lot was obviously all arranged to align vertically so that a drip of milk from the pipette broke the beam (some 3 inches below) as it fell (a further 18 inches) to the middle of the saucer.
The flash gun (off camera) was also mounted and aimed at the saucer, the camera was on a tripod and similarly aimed, pre-focused and aperture set as flash distance and Guide Number calculations determined necessary for the film speed (ISO) - shutter speed isn't relevant of course. No doubt I made some exposure adjustments after reviewing the first film developed.
The whole lot set up adjacent to the room light switch so that from a comfortable and defined seated position, I could:
Turn off the room lightRepeat as necessary ...
Open the camera shutter
Make a drip by squeezing the pipette bulb
(Flash triggers)
Close camera shutter
Turn on room light
Advance film to next frame without disturbing aim or focus of camera
You get an idea of what you have captured by observing the flash illuminated scene (think disco strobe)
Different depths of milk in saucer will give different crowns, but there's always some variability anyway, so you have to shoot plenty of frames.
Does that paint a better picture in your mind of what I built and why?
If not, this page I found shows how it might be done nowadays. The construction made is vastly different to mine, but all the key elements are the same - I'm fairly certain I also used a 555 timer chip for the delay. There are delay trigger boxes commercially available to fire the flash if you're not in to DIY electronic projects.
Cheers, Dave
PS
Knowing me, I may still have some/all the kit (from the 1970's) in my attic, but there's a lot of boxes up there and I'm sorry, but I haven't reached the point of wanting to look for it (yet).
PPS
I did find an old 'stroboscopic' example I took, although it is a catalogue of errors and problems, but this post is already far too long! Ask me if this interests you - it is one of those shots that "could have been so much better if only" to learn from.