Be easy on me, I'm new at this 
Are you folks generally defaulting to shooting in 4k? Reason I ask is that I've been experimenting in the roughly two weeks I've owned my P3P shooting video and for lack of a better description I'm not overly impressed with the video quality in 4k. It seems to be generally what I consider flickering and nowhere near the sharpness nor stability I'd expect. It's almost as if the interlacing top to bottom of the frame varies. While part of it I know is my general newbieness of the flight controls, I'm seeing distortion in the video even at a hover. Stills are incredible. Is there a general learning curve to getting stable video, i.e.: exposure, etc that I need to master in addition to the controls? If it matters, I see it in the raw footage direct off the SD card, and it's consistent on whatever machine I view it on, be it high end Mac or Windows, all of which should render it just fine. I haven't even put it into edit (test videos, not worthy of a lot of post processing.)
Thanks in advance

Are you folks generally defaulting to shooting in 4k? Reason I ask is that I've been experimenting in the roughly two weeks I've owned my P3P shooting video and for lack of a better description I'm not overly impressed with the video quality in 4k. It seems to be generally what I consider flickering and nowhere near the sharpness nor stability I'd expect. It's almost as if the interlacing top to bottom of the frame varies. While part of it I know is my general newbieness of the flight controls, I'm seeing distortion in the video even at a hover. Stills are incredible. Is there a general learning curve to getting stable video, i.e.: exposure, etc that I need to master in addition to the controls? If it matters, I see it in the raw footage direct off the SD card, and it's consistent on whatever machine I view it on, be it high end Mac or Windows, all of which should render it just fine. I haven't even put it into edit (test videos, not worthy of a lot of post processing.)
Thanks in advance