I'm currently doing something similar with a Nikon and opted to use an opto-isolator to keep the camera's electronics away from my DIY.
I'm using a TLP504A which is a dual opto-isolator so it can do the focus as well. I'd take a look at this site: www.doc-diy.net :: camera remote release pinout list which shows the pinouts for the remote for various cameras.
I would have thought you'd need to activate the focus as well, a few hundred milliseconds ahead of the shutter.
BrianOBrien:
Is this connection to the Arduino / Canon Ok?
That will work fine, but it is not the preferred way. The reason is that camera and arduino are not electrically isolated. If (by chance) you get noise or voltage spikes on the ground wire, that can be passed into the camera.
Optoisolators are preferred for that reason. I like the 4N35 for this purpose. They are good to 3500Vrms isolation (10,000 volts by my calculation) and can be had for $0.29 from tayda. A 1K resistor works fine between the Arduino and this optoisolator.
Also, a Nikon needs a focus trigger prior to the shutter trigger. A Canon does not.
Point the camera remote at a receiver connected to the Arduino,capture the data stream using the IR library and the just use what you have captured back at the ca,era. No need tomreally understand what it is as it usually looks like a long string of arbitrary 'stuff'.
marco_c:
Point the camera remote at a receiver connected to the Arduino,capture the data stream using the IR library and the just use what you have captured back at the ca,era. No need tomreally understand what it is as it usually looks like a long string of arbitrary 'stuff'.
One would assume that this is a serial data stream, and that there is an associated baud rate, start bits, stop bits, parity etc?
IR has its own standard. There are protocols that are used for these and they have to be tolerant of stray light getting in the way of the message. I captured data from my TV remote and the messages were generally the same but differed slightly in some of the numbers for the same thing.
It does not appear to be what you would expect, but there is definitely a packet format and message protocol, which often depends on the maufacturer.
You know what? I don't think there is an IR Receiver on the Canon T3.
I think there are infrared solutions to control it, but they involve a receiver that is connected to the camera.
The T3 manual doesn't mention an IR receiver. Only a wired remote.
It looks to me as though the T3 has a simple 1/8 inch stereo jack which should be easy to connect to. (I have the 50D which isn't as easy to do because it has a non-standard plug).
I believe the jack is similar to what vwlowen showed for his Nikon although Canon might have the shutter and focus as he shows or swapped.
I would recommend that you use optoisolators as he shows. You could probably get away without them but it's an expensive risk to take.