- Joined
- Jul 13, 2017
- Messages
- 44
- Reaction score
- 6
- Age
- 48
My P3S has a slight juttering when panning in video. It shows up on the sd card as well as the IPad I am flying with. I am filming in 2.7k 24 fps. Anything I can do?
At first I thought the stutter was coming from my IPad mini 4 not keeping up but when I install the sd card into my laptop and play the video I get the same stutter when panning. Does this confirm it is not a connection or to slow of a tablet issue?
It could be that the laptop is not fast enough to play the video smoothly. I would try the SD card in a faster computer and see if there is a difference. I know when I first started out viewing or editing my drone videos I had to buy a new computer with a faster processor (i7) and at least 8gb of memory. (more is better) Also a good video card with dedicated memory.
And, it could be the sd card. The cards have different output speed capabilities. Try removing the vid from carad to pc and then playback.It could be that the laptop is not fast enough to play the video smoothly. I would try the SD card in a faster computer and see if there is a difference. I know when I first started out viewing or editing my drone videos I had to buy a new computer with a faster processor (i7) and at least 8gb of memory. (more is better) Also a good video card with dedicated memory.
If you are shooting at 24fps then your shutter speed should be set at 50-60 max, with ISO set at 100 for daytime. Adjust the aperture setting to try and get the exposure meter to "0" or as close as you can without setting it to wide, I try to stay around 5-7. Are you using any ND filters? If you are shooting in "auto" mode the shutter speed will be way to fast most likely.
Racer, not being a photographer, I just was curious - IN GENERAL - is it better to shoot with faster or slower fps for video quality. Let's say I am using 1080p, is it better to use 24 fps or a higher fps?If you are shooting at 24fps then your shutter speed should be set at 50-60 max, with ISO set at 100 for daytime. Adjust the aperture setting to try and get the exposure meter to "0" or as close as you can without setting it to wide, I try to stay around 5-7. Are you using any ND filters? If you are shooting in "auto" mode the shutter speed will be way to fast most likely.
Racer, not being a photographer, I just was curious - IN GENERAL - is it better to shoot with faster or slower fps for video quality. Let's say I am using 1080p, is it better to use 24 fps or a higher fps?
Thank you!
Thank you. So since I am not interested in post production etc, 24 fps should be just fine, correct?Depends on what you are shooting. Most video we see on tv and such is 24 or 30 fps. Shooting at a higher frame rate allows you to slow it down or sped it up without a noticeable affect in quality.
Thank you. So since I am not interested in post production etc, 24 fps should be just fine, correct?
I am just interested in getting a different view on things, not in making spectacular video. Thanks again!
Here are two examples. The 1st is from last week with my P4P and the variable ND at about ND16.
This second one is from last year with my P3S. Video is 12 minutes long so you can scroll some and see the different sites I was at. ND8 filter I have for it. I set it on 1080p 60fps so I could get the shutter to 120.