It looks good in Auto. You have to realize that you have a flying camera, not a boring land camera. Just fly in Auto and use an ND filter during bright sun or for motion blur when flting close to the ground. There is no way that you can adjust the settings fast enough when you tilt the gimbal from the horizon to full down. So, just leave it in Auto and enjoy!
It seems to be, that's true. Crazily enough, I've tested my "land camera," in full auto for video, and have to say I was not disappointed. I flew yesterday in full auto, and it was as you said.
The 180deg rule is that your shutter speed should be double your frame rate. I couldnt see what your frame rate was set to. 4K 30? If it was, then your shutter speed should be 1/60. And with a fixed aperture, you need ND filters to bring it down on a sunny day. It sounds like your basing the 180deg rule on ISO. Please explain your thinking, because you're all over the place.
@InfiniteSuccessAcademy It's at 4k 60fps.... the point of testing, is to be all over the place. Stagnant testing for a moving camera is not feasible to yield results.
I'm not focused on ISO. I'm stating the fullness of everything when it comes to how shutter and ISO are handled to keep the EV at 0, or how it accentuates noise in footage.
@cre8taMilt I get what you're doing now, and I appreciate it, but if you are shooting in 60 fps, you will never achieve life like motion blur unless you slow the clip down by 50% in post. If you try using 24 or 25 fps with a 1/50 SS at 100 ISO in pro mode on a sunny day, everything will be blown out. However, if you switch to Auto, and then place an ND filter up to your lens, you'll see the specs change. Keep trying different ND filters until you obtain the SS you want. Now you will have natural motion blur. If you are looking for cinematic shots. Slow it down, my friend. The DJI algorithm, especially in Auto, does very specific things, most of which turn out really well and make no sense, according to the rules.
I've shot at 60, 30, and 24.... all with higher shutters than the rules, and it adds the "jittery" look. On this cam though, I guess I'll explore more and dial in when I want a specific look. Thanks for interacting.
Truthfully, I couldn't see a difference from my human eye. Seems realistic, nothing noticeably different. Thank you for sharing this information.
I'll keep experimenting to see if I can find a more obvious visual difference!
It looks good in Auto. You have to realize that you have a flying camera, not a boring land camera. Just fly in Auto and use an ND filter during bright sun or for motion blur when flting close to the ground. There is no way that you can adjust the settings fast enough when you tilt the gimbal from the horizon to full down. So, just leave it in Auto and enjoy!
It seems to be, that's true. Crazily enough, I've tested my "land camera," in full auto for video, and have to say I was not disappointed. I flew yesterday in full auto, and it was as you said.
Lower ISO looks better, smoother, more natural....
The 180deg rule is that your shutter speed should be double your frame rate. I couldnt see what your frame rate was set to. 4K 30? If it was, then your shutter speed should be 1/60. And with a fixed aperture, you need ND filters to bring it down on a sunny day. It sounds like your basing the 180deg rule on ISO. Please explain your thinking, because you're all over the place.
@InfiniteSuccessAcademy It's at 4k 60fps.... the point of testing, is to be all over the place. Stagnant testing for a moving camera is not feasible to yield results.
I'm not focused on ISO. I'm stating the fullness of everything when it comes to how shutter and ISO are handled to keep the EV at 0, or how it accentuates noise in footage.
@cre8taMilt I get what you're doing now, and I appreciate it, but if you are shooting in 60 fps, you will never achieve life like motion blur unless you slow the clip down by 50% in post. If you try using 24 or 25 fps with a 1/50 SS at 100 ISO in pro mode on a sunny day, everything will be blown out. However, if you switch to Auto, and then place an ND filter up to your lens, you'll see the specs change. Keep trying different ND filters until you obtain the SS you want. Now you will have natural motion blur. If you are looking for cinematic shots. Slow it down, my friend. The DJI algorithm, especially in Auto, does very specific things, most of which turn out really well and make no sense, according to the rules.
I've shot at 60, 30, and 24.... all with higher shutters than the rules, and it adds the "jittery" look. On this cam though, I guess I'll explore more and dial in when I want a specific look. Thanks for interacting.