![]() Of course, you need a cable that suits your camera or, like I did, just use the cable from a timer that I already had. (The pictures above do not show the current state of his Timer.) ![]() for a very good experience when using the timer for its main purpose: timelapse shooting. It looks just stunning, has a very powerful preset system, and is very easy to set up as it calculates movie lengths, times, etc. Markus was kind enough to send me this version and I installed it on my just-delivered M5Stack. I contacted Markus to get the Arduino code since the link was broken on his website, and he showed me the current status of his timer, which looks really polished with really nice graphics and a super sleek user interface. A small enough housing with integrated LCD, buttons, battery, and charging circuit. While looking for other options I came across a project from Markus Kail, which looked promising. If I build something, I also want to mess around with the code. There are smaller Versions now available through the LRT Forum but the one I am interested in, is closed source at the moment, and that doesn’t fit my style. I could have just built a LRTimelapse Remote Timer Free but I dislike the 2×40 Display, the outdated Arduino Uno, and the size of it. Gunther Wegner, the man behind LRTimelapse, also has a very nice tutorial on how to build your own intervalometer, which exceeds my build by miles in terms of features. With a price of around €175 (~$206), it is not on the cheap side, but I guess it’s worth every cent. The only off-the-shelf intervalometer that looks like a winner is the LRTimelapse Pro Timer 2.5.
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