Oh.... are you able to post a short clip without any adjustments?Unintentional...see the above response for what was done in post.
Oh.... are you able to post a short clip without any adjustments?Unintentional...see the above response for what was done in post.
That to me looks great trevsdad, better than mine when I yaw left or right its as if its in 1 second clips (shudders) mind you that is recording in 4k and my Samsung telly's 1080p , will try 1080 recording next flight as its not the micro sd that is a Lexar 633xbetter...I think???
Oh.... are you able to post a short clip without any adjustments?
The raw footage seems fine. You wont get nice footage with yawing as quickly as you were. There are two many pixels changing over a given time period for the codec to render a pleasing effect, partivularily within the available bitrate limitation.
Slow smooth deliberate movements are the key. Suoer quick yaws are off putting to many viewers. Without the opportunity of time to make sense of the vision it can be confusing and unnatural. Think about how fast you move your head when your taking in a nice vista. Thats about the right speed.
If you havent already check out frederick hagan on you tube. Great post tips and he flys a phantom.
If you havent already check out frederick hagan on you tube. Great post tips and he flys a phantom.
Just a few points, if you are using the pro you are capturing data at 60mbps (adv is 40mbps). Youtube re-encodes video down to about 16mpbs give or take. This will greatly decrease the quality of your video. If you want to maintain quality you export your footage from your editor you want to match the input bitrate as close as possible. Ideally output at 60mbps. Yes this will result in larger file sizes but when uploading to youtube the old adage, garbage in, garbage out, comes into play. Always upload the highest output to youtube and let them deal with the output. That way when things change in the future. e.g. they start using higher bitrates, your video will be automatically re-encoded to youtube's higher bitrate.
As for capturing footage, for the Pro you want 4k, 24fps with a shutter of 50 for nice smooth cinematic footage. Use a ND filter to keep your shutter speed down if needs be. My thinking behind this is simple, 24 frames per second encoded at 60mbps means each 4k frame as a whole gets compressed to about 2.5mb, compared to 30fps, each frame gets compressed to about 2mb. We want more bytes per frame to give it the lowest compression and higher quality.
I can see detail in the ground on the 1st corrected vs the uncorrected and I see detail in the patchy grass and the shingles/roof on the last, so not bad.
I don't see a way to make it a bunch better with just a video camera.
It really is about what you like and how tweaking in settings or post is your thing. I find the less the video making experience, the more post and of course, vice, at least for me and my skills or lack of.
Having said that it isn't absolute as I like to try to get the most possible out of my skies and the most out of ground/foreground detail and that's pretty mutually exclusive without any post.
I hope they have insurance!
Ok, you should be happy now. Seems your hardware is fine and you can proceed with confidence. Im guessing you were wondering for a while if you were wasting time in post as the camera wasn't up to spec, seems all is good.
In a nutshell, if you want the best quality out then you need to export at 60mbps. Personally, I import into Final Cut with Apple 422 HD transcoding turned on to speed up editing and exporting then I export at H264, High Profile, CABAC entropy mode, 40000kbps (40mbps, P3A). It may take a little longer to encode but I want to preserve as much of the original quality as possible. If its just a quick clip I'm not bothered about keeping then I would encode at 20000kbps (20mbps). If its a personal video I want to archive, I export the fully transcoded version (Apple 422 HD codec) and back it up to NAS drive. As its Apple 422 its going to be large file size but it means I can drop it into Compressor and render out any size or format at a later date.
If you don't have access to Final Cut then the Adobe suite can do the exact same, using DJI Transcode tool, Adobe Premiere and Adobe Media encoder.
For free alternatives I'm not sure but iMovie (OS X) or Movie Maker (win) should be capable of basic editing and output.
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