What I do when I take stills with my P3Pro is, I shoot "brackets" to make HDR-photos. Hold down the Shutter Button in the Pilot app, and a menu opens up, where you can select various shooting modes.
I shoot LOG-color mode, 5-brackets, DNG RAW. I believe that will generally produce the maximum quality photos from the P3.
I then take the 5 photos (5-brackets) and import into Lightroom (or other software that can create HDR (High Dynamic Range) photos. There I select the five photos created with the 5-brackets. They are shot at various exposure compensation - meaning some will be over-exposed and some will be under-exposed. The software then combines the 5 photos into one HDR-photo where I have a lot more freedom with regards to controlling the lighting. I can make the ground (shadows), that will often be too dark, lighter (with less noise) and I can make the highlights darker, in order to keep beautiful details in the sky, especially when shooting against the sun. The HDR-effect can be adjusted to make a very HDRish photo or a more natural looking photo - thats the art and a matter of taste.
Some caveats when doing photos this way.:
- A photo takes up about 125 megabytes (5x25 MB) so it takes a while to save the files before you can shoot again (upwards 10 seconds).
- Since it takes 5 photos (rapidly) there will be a little time between each photo. So it works best if the P3 (the flying tripod as I call it) is perfectly still in the air when taking the photo(s) - and preferably no moving parts in the frame (this can be compensated by "de-ghosting" when creating the HDR-image).
Going totally crazy, you can create some huge photos by doing 5-brackets PLUS doing Panorama!
This is where it gets mad - but also kindda cool. You can take say 4x2 photos to make a panorama (with 5-bracktets thats 40x25MB RAW photos combined into one panorama photo). This takes a little time to process
Enjoy!
PS: Also have some videography and other tips and tricks on my website.