does rocksteady affect lowlight performance? please test this out in a different video; ive heard people say this is the case of why it does bad at night. i wouldnt worry about the jitters in this scenario since im trying to find out if this is really the issue
No you can't turn off RS otherwise you will get a shaky footage. I've tried that. RS is not the reason it does bad at night. It is the low light condition that does bad for the RS do its job. Because RS needs sharp image in every frame to adjust the footage to make it steady. Slow shutter speed makes too many blur so RS can't recognize.
Plus, if you use a gimble to make it steady, you can turn RS off and set a very low shutter speed like 1/50 to get a bright and steady footage. If you don't want to use a gimble and you want steay, use a fast shutter speed. Someone said 1/200 is the lowest shutter speed that makes the RS work. I tested with 1/100 and it looked not bad.
does rocksteady affect lowlight performance? please test this out in a different video; ive heard people say this is the case of why it does bad at night. i wouldnt worry about the jitters in this scenario since im trying to find out if this is really the issue
No you can't turn off RS otherwise you will get a shaky footage. I've tried that. RS is not the reason it does bad at night. It is the low light condition that does bad for the RS do its job. Because RS needs sharp image in every frame to adjust the footage to make it steady. Slow shutter speed makes too many blur so RS can't recognize.
Plus, if you use a gimble to make it steady, you can turn RS off and set a very low shutter speed like 1/50 to get a bright and steady footage. If you don't want to use a gimble and you want steay, use a fast shutter speed. Someone said 1/200 is the lowest shutter speed that makes the RS work. I tested with 1/100 and it looked not bad.
@@rollin882 thank you