We’ve been thinking hard about what to use for barriers. The disc idea is a good one. We need to find a source on some worn ones from a grain drill or something that has smaller ones. We might have to organize a road trip to Lubbock some Saturday to buy some!!
If you want your footage to look a little better, switch your camera to 30fps and activate shutter-priority mode auto exposure so it can't change the shutter speed automatically to reduce brightness(this messes with motion blur, which is key to a natural look). Then set a max shutter speed of 1/50th of a second and buy an ND16 filter for your lens so you can still film outdoors in bright light and the scenes won't be over-exposed and illegible due to the shutter speed being locked. Technically speaking, you'll have to do this part first, otherwise your general footage outdoors can become unusable to do the excess and now uncontrollable brightness. Lemme know what camera make/model and lens (if applicable, meaning it's not an action cam) you're using and I can give you some price ranges and whatnot, as well as potentially other settings to look into and how they might affect the footage and your digital storage space. The above/current changes won't appreciably affect storage space, BTW.
Man, you went beyond my understanding very fast! I’m using a GoPro11. I’m certainly interested in learning about cameras so that I can improve my videos. As far as budget, I’m nowhere near getting monetized, so bang for my bucks is a priority! I really do appreciate you taking the time to offer good advice. I’ve been planning to try making some adjustments to see what changes to the settings do to the final product. I’ll re-read your comment several times to see how much of it I can incorporate.
@@RCRestomod RUclips videos to help you figure out the menus are plentiful, though if you want direct help with a video chat, I'll have to email you about where else you can find me. Another setting to look at (won't change storage space, either) is the ISO. ISO is the camera's light sensitivity and part of the exposure triangle. The higher the ISO, the more sensitive it gets, which will brighten the image. But if it's too high (IE trying to film in the dark with no lights) you'll get a lot of visual noise, which looks like really bad, ugly film grain (not the aesthetically pleasing type, for sure). I know a guy who flies freestyle drones with a GoPro7, 8, or 9 and he sets the max ISO to 1600 to avoid the worst of the noise. IDK if the 11 is better and you could push that one notch higher, but yeah. Minimum ISO should be set on the smallest number available as there's no problem there and you'll definitely need a low minimum ISO to get the scene dark enough even WITH the ND filter. I'm doing research on filters for your camera now and will get back to you in the next reply, or directly through the method mentioned in the first paragraph.
@@RCRestomod Okay, Freewell ND filters look great, but you first need to confirm that your lens is removable by twisting and then popping it off the front because the review I watched was using a Hero9 Black and IDK if the black series is different from normal. That aside, I've confirmed that you can definitely get away with just an ND16, but an ND32 will be more properly exposed in the brightest conditions, and as such, look a little more professional. Single filters are 20 bucks or so as of four years ago when the review was posted, so they might be 25-30 now. Or you could (at the time of review) buy a set of 4 different filters (ND8, 16, 32, and a polarizer) for 70, which would save you roughly 12.5% on MSRP.
The white 1977 Nissan Skyline was really cool! LOL
It is pretty awesome!!
beautiful location suitable for playing remote control cars i like the place,thank you friend
We had a really good time sliding around. We will definitely go back again and again!
Need to build some actual oval barriers, plow discs, or something. That would be perfect for the new LOSI NASCARS.
We’ve been thinking hard about what to use for barriers. The disc idea is a good one. We need to find a source on some worn ones from a grain drill or something that has smaller ones. We might have to organize a road trip to Lubbock some Saturday to buy some!!
😊
Thanks!!
If you want your footage to look a little better, switch your camera to 30fps and activate shutter-priority mode auto exposure so it can't change the shutter speed automatically to reduce brightness(this messes with motion blur, which is key to a natural look). Then set a max shutter speed of 1/50th of a second and buy an ND16 filter for your lens so you can still film outdoors in bright light and the scenes won't be over-exposed and illegible due to the shutter speed being locked.
Technically speaking, you'll have to do this part first, otherwise your general footage outdoors can become unusable to do the excess and now uncontrollable brightness. Lemme know what camera make/model and lens (if applicable, meaning it's not an action cam) you're using and I can give you some price ranges and whatnot, as well as potentially other settings to look into and how they might affect the footage and your digital storage space. The above/current changes won't appreciably affect storage space, BTW.
Man, you went beyond my understanding very fast! I’m using a GoPro11. I’m certainly interested in learning about cameras so that I can improve my videos. As far as budget, I’m nowhere near getting monetized, so bang for my bucks is a priority! I really do appreciate you taking the time to offer good advice. I’ve been planning to try making some adjustments to see what changes to the settings do to the final product. I’ll re-read your comment several times to see how much of it I can incorporate.
@@RCRestomod RUclips videos to help you figure out the menus are plentiful, though if you want direct help with a video chat, I'll have to email you about where else you can find me.
Another setting to look at (won't change storage space, either) is the ISO. ISO is the camera's light sensitivity and part of the exposure triangle. The higher the ISO, the more sensitive it gets, which will brighten the image. But if it's too high (IE trying to film in the dark with no lights) you'll get a lot of visual noise, which looks like really bad, ugly film grain (not the aesthetically pleasing type, for sure).
I know a guy who flies freestyle drones with a GoPro7, 8, or 9 and he sets the max ISO to 1600 to avoid the worst of the noise. IDK if the 11 is better and you could push that one notch higher, but yeah. Minimum ISO should be set on the smallest number available as there's no problem there and you'll definitely need a low minimum ISO to get the scene dark enough even WITH the ND filter.
I'm doing research on filters for your camera now and will get back to you in the next reply, or directly through the method mentioned in the first paragraph.
@@RCRestomod Okay, Freewell ND filters look great, but you first need to confirm that your lens is removable by twisting and then popping it off the front because the review I watched was using a Hero9 Black and IDK if the black series is different from normal.
That aside, I've confirmed that you can definitely get away with just an ND16, but an ND32 will be more properly exposed in the brightest conditions, and as such, look a little more professional. Single filters are 20 bucks or so as of four years ago when the review was posted, so they might be 25-30 now. Or you could (at the time of review) buy a set of 4 different filters (ND8, 16, 32, and a polarizer) for 70, which would save you roughly 12.5% on MSRP.