I am guessing you are not a photographer. Sometimes that makes for bliss.
Aha, I see you're trying to say that I'm an idiot. "
Ignorance is Bliss". Very droll.
OK, so you're an expert, right? What other polarising filter options are available?
I'll say one thing: the camera's not a patch on the QX100 I've been flying on an F550 for the last 3 years. I really miss that 3x Optical zoom and
real 20Mp 1" sensor, but the 1080p video was a bit limiting and I can now do AEB *5 HDR photos with the Obsidian that look
great, so...swings and roundabouts.
On the subject of HDR, I can highly recommend EasyHDR. The chromatic aberration removal even on single images is amazing, and with AEB shots: the results are IMO better than PhotoMatix Pro produces and on a par with Aurora HDR at a much lower cost.
I tested them (and others) with dozens of shots and...EasyHDR gets my vote. BTW if you download the V3 demo (there is also a free V2 Basic version, but...spend some cash, the results are worth it) it doesn't automatically recognise the DJI 6310 (
P4P) camera for chromatic aberration removal, but you can set the focal length to 9mm (slightly off, but close) to test with. In the paid-for version it uses the
correct data from the LensFun database automatically. Neither Photomatix Pro or Aurora HDR recognise the camera at all, so...pass?
Oh yes, it also works perfectly with RAW photos and applies the correct Lens Correction to them (not in the demo version though)
Anyway, you being an expert: how is your camera working in video mode? Specifically 1080p video?
Does changing sharpness have an effect, or is it broken, like mine? So far I haven't found a single person who is able to show their 1080p video isn't oversharp; but they must be out there somewhere, or people would have been screaming about this since launch, and I only got my Obsidian a few months ago.
Did you look at the video a few posts further up? Have a look if you can spare a few minutes. Speed it up to x2 and you won't miss anything, as I made it a bit slow. Sorry about that, but I wanted to give people time to see the (lack of) sharpness change in 1080p. At least 2.7k and 4k are usable. Here it is again, so you don't have to scroll back up: