Olympus E-PM1 camera left-hand thread screws to catch fixers out

This post is as a public service. WARNING – an Olympus E-PM1 camera has some LEFT-HAND thread screws. I’ll show you where these blighters are later.

Manufacturers really seem to hate people taking their gear apart, but I’ve never come across Olympus’s sort of craftiness before. There’s no good reason for them to make these screws left-hand thread, other than to make you strip the soft plastic they’re set into if you have the temerity to try to take your own property apart. Evil bastards. It’s not like a bicycle crank on the left-hand side, where there’s a damn good reason for the left-hand thread.

I quite liked this camera, despite the plastic battery door hinges breaking off after a year. It’s pocketable, but can take a decent EVF if necessary, I have a VF-4. I recently dropped the camera, and on power-up I hear this noise (recorded form about 2cm away). The clunk is fine and has always been like that, the death rattle is new.

Which does not fill me with confidence that this camera is long for this world, although the pictures are fine. I can almost count the plastic gear teeth wearing, and it’s loud enough to draw attention, which is a drag for photographing people. I suspect it’s slower off the mark than it used to be, too. So I thought I’d pop the back and take a look to see if something is obviously wrong. Continue reading “Olympus E-PM1 camera left-hand thread screws to catch fixers out”

Raspberry Pi Zero audio recording with the AudioInjector hat

Just when I thought the remote Olympus recorder is the way to go here, along comes a promising new Pi solution for remote recording – this looks to be low cost and small. What more could a fellow want?

Decent instructions and specs, for a start 😉 Australia seems to have a vibrant electronics tinkering community, and Matt Flax of audio-injector has come up with a dinky little recording sound card suitable for the Pi Zero, without the sort of stupendous kernel-compiling hurt associated with the now discontinued, Wolfson/Cirrus sound card. Matt even used Cirrus tech under the hood, kudos to him for making it work in the Pi environment- I guess the Pi has advanced in standardising add-on gizmos too.

You can buy the AudioInjector Zero from Australia, only to discover postage is about as much as the sound card, so Google helped me discover that you can get it in the UK from Amazon, who drop-ship it at a much more acceptable price of £12.50 delivered free if the total order is > £20. So I go get one.

The Pi Zero sound card – tiny. Look ma, zero connectors!

Nice. No GPIO connectors, though you get a nice bunch of extra audio connectors to make this connect to phono jacks. How does that work, then? Continue reading “Raspberry Pi Zero audio recording with the AudioInjector hat”