Ming, even though your most excellent video is three years old it continues to educate and help others. My new camera has all three types of shutters with no explanation other than how to turn them on and off, so your in depth video is an outstanding teaching aid. Thank you for taking the time to make this video and pass your knowledge to the less experienced.
Thank you for showing the differences between the shutter types. I have been worried about switching to electronic shutter, but now that I know the differences, I will try using it with more confidense.
I think the difference between mechanical and EFC shutter can be explained by parallaxe. With mechanical shutter the first and second curtain have the same parallaxe. With EFC the first curtain has no parallaxe and the second curtain has parallaxe. The mechanical shutter sits some millimeters before the sensor, while the electronic first curtain is exactly 0mm before the sensor. So this effect should be most pronounced with fast shutter speed and bright wide angle lenses, where the light doesnt hit the sensor in a 90° angle. And there is another effect: When shutterspeed is high, the there is only a small slit where light passes to the sensor. The shutter blades are matte black and dont reflect much light. The sensor itself reflects a lot of light, so when electronic shutter or EFC is used, this can give unwanted reflections in the rear lenses.
@@mikafoxx2717 The 180-degree rule is garbage. Also, not what this video is about. It's the TYPE of shutter that this video is about. Rolling shutter is caused by the shutter/sensor only working line by line. The only way to eliminate that if you can't make the readout any faster is to use a global shutter. Global shutter is the future and how ALL cameras should function by default.
@@Drunken_Hamster It's not garbage, it's due to how our eyes perceive sample and hold as unnatural, so we need to blur between the frames to reduce eye fatigue to emulate the frames between frames. There's a reason to it. It's a bendable rule but a good rule nevertheless. I agree global shutter is great but unrealistic, just having really fast sensor readout is good enough and gets rid of an expensive mechanical shutter (especially when it fails).
@@mikafoxx2717 Yeah, but motion blur doesn't "scale" to frame rate. If you have 1/60th of a second shutter speed, that means each frame captures 1/60th of a second of motion and will have 1/60th of a second of blur. It doesn't matter if you do it once, 24 times, 30 times, 50 times, or 60 times every second, each frame will have the same amount of blur and will look the same amount "natural." But if you scale the shutter speed to the frame rate, then every time you raise the frame rate you're also reducing the motion blur, which looks unnatural. The 180-degree rule is one of the primary reasons people tend to dislike the look of HFR and why people will have such a stuck up their ass about 24fps even over the much better looking 30fps (imo, at least for everything except LITERALLY a Hollywood level traditional production movie).
mohammed samsheer nope not at all, it’s just a little chunky XT2 with a much needed grip for bigger lenses like my 16-55f2.8 it only get v big when you have a large zoom and the battery grip
Finaly found a reasonable video why i got flickwring.. i use always silent shooting. And now i see that if i want to shoot fast object or concerts mechanical is a way! Thanks
Thanks. This sums up why I got those lines/bands and some warping when setting my shutter to silent (and those no longer fully mechanical) when shooting indoor stage shows. Shooting on a Sony a7iv.
Its almost as if using EFCS is causing the aperture to ever so slightly close down...this is consistent with the dual observation of reduced exposure and increased depth of field with EFCS! A very interesting optical phenomenon...must be pursued further in my opinion. BTW, Ming was my favourite villian from Flash Gordon!
in a nutshell... mechanical when: - moving subject - not a lot of natural light electronic when: - still subject - plenty of natural light - u need to be silent
Thanks for explaining the shutter options and reasons where each is better. This I just another of your many valuable videos on the xt series which I save for future reference 🙂
Thank you so much Ming for a very well explained instructions. I don’t know why some can give a thumbs dn for such excellent video. I hv 3 questions: 1) I saw there is still a curtain moving for EFC and you mentioned there is no vibration. In theory will there be still a vibration but is so minute that prob would not be noticeable? Does EFC register shutter count? 2) Both EFC and Electronic has certain limitation for shutter speed. And the latter will cause banding as well under certain light condition. Assuming speed is within range and under ideal light conditions, is EFC or Electronic better to bring out the sharpest and most dynamic range and with the least noise. 3) Do you have any ideal what is the bit value for each type of shutter? I read a comment in a forum that electronic shutter normally has lesser bit but he can’t confirm. I can’t find such info despite I google extensively. TQ so much.
David Low I am not sure if he refers to bit depth, I don’t think shutter type has anything to do with the bit depth, so EFC and Electronic shutter should give you the same bits
Thank you that was great, so for landscapes handheld should use mechanical shutter, would I still get the sharpest images more than using electronic without a tripod
If you're using electronic front curtain shutter, does it count as a shutter count? I know that the mechanical shutter counts each click but I'm not sure if the electronic shutter counts each click.
Subscribed 👍 Just wanted to say.... something I have found out after much head scratching. I put the supplied xt3 flash on my camera... and found that it simply wouldn't operate or turn on in the menus. I thought it must be broken... I then wondered perhaps if it might be related to shutter. I changed my shutter from ES to EF and hey presto... TTL flash became available. I presume this was camera telling me that no way can it take a flash photo while in ES mode due to the read write speeds of the pixels during the flash sequence. Quite a puzzler as theres no clues given in camera when the flash doesnt engage. All the best... regards.... Steve
I watch 3 videos before I got the full understanding of this subject here. The example shots helped a lot. Thanks for that...Btw mine has Auto setting but no Front Curtain. I wonder if I should let the camera decides
Thanks for the good explanation. I have a Fuji X-T20 which only has MS and ES (not ESFC). Apart from the "silence benefit", when should I use ES? Thanks in advance.
So the question I have to anybody is when shooting street photography which is normally what I do what shutter settings do you use our use electronics plus mechanical shutter
What do you think of using the EF + M + ES setting on the camera? Would this give the best of all worlds? Otherwise the Camera will not go over 1/8000 when shooting in bright light.
Can you tell me what kind of shutter Sony a7c has. After watching a lot of video and reveiws it seems like this camera doesn't have a mechanical shutter
Electronic shutter is also much faster than mechanical shutter, at least as far as I know for cameras with "leaf" shutters, like my Fujifilm. Therefore, if you need faster consecutive shots, electronic can do this. In addition, if you are using a fast lens like the f1 50mm, without a neutral density filter of some kind to decrease exposure time, you might need to use the electronic shutter to avoid getting photos that are too bright or washed out. That's all I know that might be useful.
Nice educational lecture. As a new sports photographer in Nigeria using the Fuji XT30 with the 50-140mm f/2.8. What type of shutter would you use if it was your job to shoot the football games?
Hi Ming, nice video! I'm using X-T2 and I shoot a lot of long exposure, do u think mechanical shutter will cause shutter shock in this shooting situation as I notice i'm not getting very sharp images from 10-24mm lens
I really need help on this! Im trying to change my shutter type in video for my XH1, but it’s greyed out - stuck on electronic shutter. I really want to change it to mechanical for video!! Any tips??
Late to comment, but when using the fast lenses at f2 or wider (as in your 35mm and 90mm) at a shutter speed over 1/2000, you will begin to see a degradation of the bokeh that will get worse as you increase the shutter speed when using the EFCS. Fuji and Canon do recommend to switch to MS in this situation.
One question. If I use the Ar7 ii with a lightning trigger (for lightning photography) do you thing that I will get banding? I'm thinking about using f10 exp 1/10 iso 100. With the efcs (because it has the lowest shutter lag).
Great video, thanks! Nit-picking here, but the photos were taken "by" you and "with" the camera. Lesson I learned 1st day in photography class, "you" are the artist, not the camera. :)
What about the EF+M+E mode on the Fujis ? (front curtain until 1/2000, MS over that and ES over 1/8000) isn't it the best setting unless you want to go silent?
Until you press the shutter button, the shutter is actually open. Only then it is going to close (front curtain). Given that you are using the mechanical shutter.
@@markymark240682 , aha! Didn't know that. But isn't it more time consuming to first close the shutter and then open it and close again to take the photo? reaction time could be lowered if the shutter was already closed when I press the trigger.
@@electrocatalyst 🤔 never thought about it, technically yes. In reality your reaction time might be a bigger factor. DSLRs also had a mirror that had to move out of the way. Shutter mechanisms should be way faster than that. The fastest camera might be a view camera (range finder) though. Good point.
Thanks Ming for this interesting video! Are your observations also valid for xt2 and xt3 ? And what is the shutter you use for: a) very sharp landscape on tripod b) Photography the Milky way?
patrick lancien Hi Patrick, thank you for your comment. XT2 or XT3 don’t have EFCS, so you either use mechanical or electronic. For shooting landscapes and Milky Way, I would set up my camera on a steady tripod and use electronic shutter to maximize the sharpness. If I need to shoot hand held, I would use mechanical.
@@MingCai Then, are your oservation valid for the xt3? (Is it the same shutter as in your video?) And also for the milky way, you don't use the long exposition noise reduction option?
Hi you say the XT3 does not have Electronic Front Curtain Shutter. I thought EFE front shutter curtain on the XT3 was the same thing. Is there a difference?
Thank you for the Video :) I have one Question regarding the Mechanical Shutter tho. It offen happend to me, that using the xh1 and the Mechanical shutter the preview (so befor i take the photo, despite if it is auto or manual or on the display or the finder) looks perfect, but in the result everything is way to bright (on the pc and again the display and finder). Therefore i offen have to use settings with which i almost can't se what is on the display so the endresult is usable. This is impossible to use for fast moving objects tho, because i can't even really see what ist on the screen. I hope my explanation makes sence and somebody could help me with that problem.
I recall someone else reporting that you lose dynamic range with electronic shutter compared to mechanical shutter. What is your experience - more relevant to landscape photography where you need maximum sharpness and dynamic range.
Johan Liebenberg I didn’t compare dynamic range directly. I have been using electronic shutter for landscape photography for a long time, but I didn’t notice any difference.
Ming, even though your most excellent video is three years old it continues to educate and help others. My new camera has all three types of shutters with no explanation other than how to turn them on and off, so your in depth video is an outstanding teaching aid. Thank you for taking the time to make this video and pass your knowledge to the less experienced.
My fave explanation so far, seems for me EFCS is the best option. Thanks for the video!
Thank you for showing the differences between the shutter types. I have been worried about switching to electronic shutter, but now that I know the differences, I will try using it with more confidense.
Stanley Morinaka That’s awesome!
Thanks for shedding light on this. Well presented!
Gregor Nussberger Thank you for your comment
I think the difference between mechanical and EFC shutter can be explained by parallaxe. With mechanical shutter the first and second curtain have the same parallaxe.
With EFC the first curtain has no parallaxe and the second curtain has parallaxe. The mechanical shutter sits some millimeters before the sensor, while the electronic first curtain is exactly 0mm before the sensor.
So this effect should be most pronounced with fast shutter speed and bright wide angle lenses, where the light doesnt hit the sensor in a 90° angle.
And there is another effect: When shutterspeed is high, the there is only a small slit where light passes to the sensor. The shutter blades are matte black and dont reflect much light.
The sensor itself reflects a lot of light, so when electronic shutter or EFC is used, this can give unwanted reflections in the rear lenses.
This was great. First day with a Fuji T-2. Many questions.
This sums it up great. Now I know which video I'm going to show people if they're asking about this topic.
Excellent concise script, A+ production value. Best explanation of shutters. Thank you for sharing.
4:11 So glad you mentioned global shutter. The only real solution, especially for video.
Video is still only double the framerate for shutter speed, so usually it's not an issue. Arri isn't a global shutter.
@@mikafoxx2717 The 180-degree rule is garbage. Also, not what this video is about. It's the TYPE of shutter that this video is about. Rolling shutter is caused by the shutter/sensor only working line by line. The only way to eliminate that if you can't make the readout any faster is to use a global shutter.
Global shutter is the future and how ALL cameras should function by default.
@@Drunken_Hamster It's not garbage, it's due to how our eyes perceive sample and hold as unnatural, so we need to blur between the frames to reduce eye fatigue to emulate the frames between frames. There's a reason to it. It's a bendable rule but a good rule nevertheless. I agree global shutter is great but unrealistic, just having really fast sensor readout is good enough and gets rid of an expensive mechanical shutter (especially when it fails).
@@mikafoxx2717 Yeah, but motion blur doesn't "scale" to frame rate. If you have 1/60th of a second shutter speed, that means each frame captures 1/60th of a second of motion and will have 1/60th of a second of blur. It doesn't matter if you do it once, 24 times, 30 times, 50 times, or 60 times every second, each frame will have the same amount of blur and will look the same amount "natural."
But if you scale the shutter speed to the frame rate, then every time you raise the frame rate you're also reducing the motion blur, which looks unnatural. The 180-degree rule is one of the primary reasons people tend to dislike the look of HFR and why people will have such a stuck up their ass about 24fps even over the much better looking 30fps (imo, at least for everything except LITERALLY a Hollywood level traditional production movie).
Thanks for the awesome summary at the end! Best video on this subject so far!
This was super useful when using my XH1, keep the Fuji vids coming 👍
Do you like the XH!? planning to buy one
@@mohammedsamsheer284 yeah i love it!
@@LukeLine is it as heavy or large as people make it to seem?
mohammed samsheer nope not at all, it’s just a little chunky XT2 with a much needed grip for bigger lenses like my 16-55f2.8 it only get v big when you have a large zoom and the battery grip
Finaly found a reasonable video why i got flickwring.. i use always silent shooting. And now i see that if i want to shoot fast object or concerts mechanical is a way! Thanks
The best explanation of shutter modes that I've seen! Thanks very much!
Thanks. This sums up why I got those lines/bands and some warping when setting my shutter to silent (and those no longer fully mechanical) when shooting indoor stage shows. Shooting on a Sony a7iv.
Excellent video Ming, in every way You explained it all really clearly and you also put the bullet points in the text - what's not to like? Subscribed
Its almost as if using EFCS is causing the aperture to ever so slightly close down...this is consistent with the dual observation of reduced exposure and increased depth of field with EFCS! A very interesting optical phenomenon...must be pursued further in my opinion. BTW, Ming was my favourite villian from Flash Gordon!
Finally I understood! Unfortunatelly I met with shutter shock, that is why using ef or es. Thanks for expanation!
wowwowowowowowow i like the explanaition so much
the first one to explain it this clear
thanks brother
Thanks a lot! finally after about 4 videos I understood the differences between all the shutter modes!
This was a great video explaining the different shutters. Thanks homie!
in a nutshell...
mechanical when:
- moving subject
- not a lot of natural light
electronic when:
- still subject
- plenty of natural light
- u need to be silent
EFCS for long exposure and landscape
Thanks a lot. I've been clarified about different types of shutter on my Fujifilm
thanks for sharing mate. your illustration is very straightforward and easily understood
Great video :) Now i so much better understand diferents between them. Thank you maestro from Slovakia :)
Please make more videos about X-h1!! Great video,thank you!!
youmarci Sure thing and thank you very much for you comment!
@@MingCai again,please make an x-h1 tutorial :)
youmarci yes this
Thanks for explaining the shutter options and reasons where each is better.
This I just another of your many valuable videos on the xt series which I save for future reference 🙂
Great explanation mate, well done.
Best video I found about this topic. Much appreciated!
Very comprehensive presentation. Thumbs up!
Best explanation of shutters. Thanks.
Thank you so much Ming for a very well explained instructions. I don’t know why some can give a thumbs dn for such excellent video. I hv 3 questions:
1) I saw there is still a curtain moving for EFC and you mentioned there is no vibration.
In theory will there be still a vibration but is so minute that prob would not be noticeable? Does EFC register shutter count?
2) Both EFC and Electronic has certain limitation for shutter speed. And the latter will cause banding as well under certain light condition. Assuming speed is within range and under ideal light conditions, is EFC or Electronic better to bring out the sharpest and most dynamic range and with the least noise.
3) Do you have any ideal what is the bit value for each type of shutter? I read a comment in a forum that electronic shutter normally has lesser bit but he can’t confirm. I can’t find such info despite I google extensively.
TQ so much.
David Low I am not sure if he refers to bit depth, I don’t think shutter type has anything to do with the bit depth, so EFC and Electronic shutter should give you the same bits
@@MingCai Thank you Ming
Greetings from México Ming, Thank you very much for a fantastic video! I learned a lot today.
Gurley Hardin Hey Gurley, glad it helps!
Thank you for posting this excellent explanation of the different shutter types.
Fred Pearson Thank you for the comment!
@@MingCai, no, thank you for posting useful information in a sea of useless, mind-numbing vlog/videos.
Best explanation I've seen of this subject. Thanks for preparing it.
Ralph Watson You are welcome
Thanks a lot for sharing this man ♥️ love this one !
I love the graphics. Very helpful.
1...how to find which shutter are hooked in out cameras...??
This was a really solid video on so many levels. Super helpful.
Thank you that was great, so for landscapes handheld should use mechanical shutter, would I still get the sharpest images more than using electronic without a tripod
Great job. Well organized and presented. Thanks.
how do these shutter types compare in relation to shutter count on the camera?
Exactly what I am looking for. Thanks man!
Such a perfect explanation! Thank you so much!
i think bokeh is the same but the contrast is higher out of depth of field which gives the impression that es has less bokeh.
Thanks for the explanation Ming
If you're using electronic front curtain shutter, does it count as a shutter count? I know that the mechanical shutter counts each click but I'm not sure if the electronic shutter counts each click.
Well done Ming - Shutters/Flash differences would be good if feasible. Cheers AU.
Ian Johnstone Did some more research and it seems mechanical shutter would be the best for flash.
does this affect in movie mode too? because for sony A7 III the setting is in the movie section....
Subscribed 👍 Just wanted to say.... something I have found out after much head scratching. I put the supplied xt3 flash on my camera... and found that it simply wouldn't operate or turn on in the menus. I thought it must be broken... I then wondered perhaps if it might be related to shutter. I changed my shutter from ES to EF and hey presto... TTL flash became available. I presume this was camera telling me that no way can it take a flash photo while in ES mode due to the read write speeds of the pixels during the flash sequence. Quite a puzzler as theres no clues given in camera when the flash doesnt engage. All the best... regards.... Steve
Steve D That’s a nice finding! Thank you for sharing
Thank you for explaining this so well
I watch 3 videos before I got the full understanding of this subject here. The example shots helped a lot. Thanks for that...Btw mine has Auto setting but no Front Curtain. I wonder if I should let the camera decides
Presume merchanical shutters wear out too.... I guess there is a predicted shutter count life. informative, thanks.
Excellent explanation with no BS. Many thanks :-)
Thanks for the good explanation. I have a Fuji X-T20 which only has MS and ES (not ESFC). Apart from the "silence benefit", when should I use ES? Thanks in advance.
Sir which shutter is better for camera shutter life or increase camera life ?
So the question I have to anybody is when shooting street photography which is normally what I do what shutter settings do you use our use electronics plus mechanical shutter
Excellent information and video. Thank you.
What do you think of using the EF + M + ES setting on the camera? Would this give the best of all worlds? Otherwise the Camera will not go over 1/8000 when shooting in bright light.
Thank you for sharing.
Very good explanation.
Super well explained, thanks for that! 🙏
Thanks for posting. Excellent explanation.
Can you tell me what kind of shutter Sony a7c has. After watching a lot of video and reveiws it seems like this camera doesn't have a mechanical shutter
Thanks... Very clear yor information.
Thanks for the test cases
Well explained and helpful video - keep up the good work :)
lat2310 Thank you!
Great video! Very well explained!
jorge de sousa Thank you very much!
hello ming very well explained congratulations !!!👌👌
Ariel alejandro Giesler Thank you!
Is global shutter the same as the anti distortion shutter on the A9?
Electronic shutter is also much faster than mechanical shutter, at least as far as I know for cameras with "leaf" shutters, like my Fujifilm. Therefore, if you need faster consecutive shots, electronic can do this. In addition, if you are using a fast lens like the f1 50mm, without a neutral density filter of some kind to decrease exposure time, you might need to use the electronic shutter to avoid getting photos that are too bright or washed out.
That's all I know that might be useful.
Nice educational lecture.
As a new sports photographer in Nigeria using the Fuji XT30 with the 50-140mm f/2.8. What type of shutter would you use if it was your job to shoot the football games?
Don Barron Studios since you need fast shutter speed, you can probably avoid shutter shock, therefore I would use mechanical shutter
Thank you. How do you switch from one type to the
other? Is it available in most cameras?
It is avaliable in the settings if your camera supports it. This is specific to MILC cameras AFAIK.
@@proksalevente Thanks
Hi Ming, nice video! I'm using X-T2 and I shoot a lot of long exposure, do u think mechanical shutter will cause shutter shock in this shooting situation as I notice i'm not getting very sharp images from 10-24mm lens
Thank you so much for describing this ❤
I really need help on this! Im trying to change my shutter type in video for my XH1, but it’s greyed out - stuck on electronic shutter. I really want to change it to mechanical for video!! Any tips??
Blur also happens and longer shuttertimes, when the tripod is not steady enough.
Loved your explanation! Thank you!
Late to comment, but when using the fast lenses at f2 or wider (as in your 35mm and 90mm) at a shutter speed over 1/2000, you will begin to see a degradation of the bokeh that will get worse as you increase the shutter speed when using the EFCS. Fuji and Canon do recommend to switch to MS in this situation.
What about long exposures? Wont it cause problems with electronic shutter?
ES is good if you are in very bright light, and want a low f-stop, f 1.8 or whatever. For mechanical shutter, one would need to use an ND filter.
Great vid Ming! Thanks.
Best explanation! Thank you!
One question. If I use the Ar7 ii with a lightning trigger (for lightning photography) do you thing that I will get banding? I'm thinking about using f10 exp 1/10 iso 100. With the efcs (because it has the lowest shutter lag).
Great video, thanks! Nit-picking here, but the photos were taken "by" you and "with" the camera. Lesson I learned 1st day in photography class, "you" are the artist, not the camera. :)
This was so easy to understand, thanks!
TheDecree93 Thank you for watching and commenting!
Nice job. Follow this guy!
Thanks for a great explanation.
Colin Hothersall Thank you!
What about the EF+M+E mode on the Fujis ? (front curtain until 1/2000, MS over that and ES over 1/8000) isn't it the best setting unless you want to go silent?
tchokido kido That means the camera will automatically choose a shutter for you based on the setting.
Ming Cai i know, it is pretty self explanatory :), but isn’t it the perfect mode then?
@@LNMGS It is the best option, yes.
How come we can have a live preview of the image straight from the sensor if the shutters are closed until we actually take a photo?
Until you press the shutter button, the shutter is actually open. Only then it is going to close (front curtain). Given that you are using the mechanical shutter.
@@markymark240682 , aha! Didn't know that. But isn't it more time consuming to first close the shutter and then open it and close again to take the photo? reaction time could be lowered if the shutter was already closed when I press the trigger.
@@electrocatalyst 🤔 never thought about it, technically yes. In reality your reaction time might be a bigger factor. DSLRs also had a mirror that had to move out of the way. Shutter mechanisms should be way faster than that. The fastest camera might be a view camera (range finder) though. Good point.
Thanks Ming for this interesting video!
Are your observations also valid for xt2 and xt3 ?
And what is the shutter you use for:
a) very sharp landscape on tripod
b) Photography the Milky way?
patrick lancien Hi Patrick, thank you for your comment. XT2 or XT3 don’t have EFCS, so you either use mechanical or electronic. For shooting landscapes and Milky Way, I would set up my camera on a steady tripod and use electronic shutter to maximize the sharpness. If I need to shoot hand held, I would use mechanical.
patrick lancien Sorry just to correct myself. X-T3 does have electronic front curtain shutter.
@@MingCai Then, are your oservation valid for the xt3? (Is it the same shutter as in your video?)
And also for the milky way, you don't use the long exposition noise reduction option?
patrick lancien yeah, it should be valid for XT3. I don’t use noise reduction, since it takes too much time for long exposures.
@@MingCai Thanks
Hi you say the XT3 does not have Electronic Front Curtain Shutter. I thought EFE front shutter curtain on the XT3 was the same thing. Is there a difference?
Tom H Sorry I was wrong. I looked at X-T3 manual and it does have Electronic Front Curtain.
@@MingCai Thanks for replying. Interesting vid.
Great video! Thanks!
Hi Ming, I think he's saying shutter "Shake"!
Very helpful! Thanks!
Basically, will rolling shutter be an issue? if so use Mechanical, if not use Electronic.
very good video, dude! Thanks!
Thank you for the Video :)
I have one Question regarding the Mechanical Shutter tho.
It offen happend to me, that using the xh1 and the Mechanical shutter the preview (so befor i take the photo, despite if it is auto or manual or on the display or the finder) looks perfect, but in the result everything is way to bright (on the pc and again the display and finder). Therefore i offen have to use settings with which i almost can't se what is on the display so the endresult is usable. This is impossible to use for fast moving objects tho, because i can't even really see what ist on the screen.
I hope my explanation makes sence and somebody could help me with that problem.
I recall someone else reporting that you lose dynamic range with electronic shutter compared to mechanical shutter. What is your experience - more relevant to landscape photography where you need maximum sharpness and dynamic range.
Johan Liebenberg I didn’t compare dynamic range directly. I have been using electronic shutter for landscape photography for a long time, but I didn’t notice any difference.
Very useful info. Thanks Ming.
matheeq You are welcome!
Thanks. Excellent video
Thanks for sharing