Awesome video, thank you. I have a Hero 12 and I’ve found that recording at 5.3K turns off the camera due to overheating. This is under normal conditions while riding a bike in a bike trail with a lot of trees (shadows) I will be trying 4K / 30 fps / 8:7
I can see this being a very practical way for gravel biking or an easy less aggressive trail system. I may give it a shot. For aggressive downhill or rugged riding I would say stick with either the chest mount or chin mount. With my chesty I mount it upside down to obtain a more vertical view at 16:9 and stick with wide for lesser distortion. Is that possible with this system? (Flip camera upside down)The settings you suggest do work great.
Yes, if doing a really aggressive trail or jumps then I recommend the chest mount. Yes, you can mount the camera upside down using this system as well which is great to have that flexibility.
Howdy! I’ve learned how to use my GoPro 11 entirely from your videos. Thanks for that. I’m going on a dream four day (25-30 miles a day) trail run in the Alps for my 50th this next week and I’m wondering what setting set you’d recommend for getting trail running footage in bright sunny mountains of the alps? Would you change white balance and or iso after the morning light and near sunset? I have no filters and will only have the hero 11 and the Volta. Warmly, Sean
That sounds like an incredible adventure! I’d recommend a white balance of 6500K during the first hour of daylight and the last hour of daylight. The rest of the day a white balance of 5000K or 5500K should work well. The 5500K will have a bit warmer appearance and the 5000K a bit cooler appearance. An ISO range of 100 Min to 800 Max should be good since you’ll be in bright, sunny mountains. Hope you have a great time!
Great video with lots of good information. Thanks for sharing! 🤠👍
I appreciate it!
Great video! Even though I don't have a bike I still enjoyed it.
Thank you! Yes, I do a lot more hiking than biking but I do enjoy some biking as well from time to time.
Awesome video, thank you. I have a Hero 12 and I’ve found that recording at 5.3K turns off the camera due to overheating. This is under normal conditions while riding a bike in a bike trail with a lot of trees (shadows) I will be trying 4K / 30 fps / 8:7
I sure enjoy your instructional videos. I can understand your voice!
Thank you: I appreciate your feedback!
thank you for all your Go Pro related tips. much appreciated.
I appreciate it!
Great tips, my go to channel for GoPro settings!!
Thank you for your feedback and support!
I can see this being a very practical way for gravel biking or an easy less aggressive trail system. I may give it a shot. For aggressive downhill or rugged riding I would say stick with either the chest mount or chin mount. With my chesty I mount it upside down to obtain a more vertical view at 16:9 and stick with wide for lesser distortion. Is that possible with this system? (Flip camera upside down)The settings you suggest do work great.
Yes, if doing a really aggressive trail or jumps then I recommend the chest mount. Yes, you can mount the camera upside down using this system as well which is great to have that flexibility.
Howdy!
I’ve learned how to use my GoPro 11 entirely from your videos. Thanks for that. I’m going on a dream four day (25-30 miles a day) trail run in the Alps for my 50th this next week and I’m wondering what setting set you’d recommend for getting trail running footage in bright sunny mountains of the alps? Would you change white balance and or iso after the morning light and near sunset? I have no filters and will only have the hero 11 and the Volta.
Warmly,
Sean
That sounds like an incredible adventure! I’d recommend a white balance of 6500K during the first hour of daylight and the last hour of daylight. The rest of the day a white balance of 5000K or 5500K should work well. The 5500K will have a bit warmer appearance and the 5000K a bit cooler appearance. An ISO range of 100 Min to 800 Max should be good since you’ll be in bright, sunny mountains.
Hope you have a great time!
I've noticed that having the Shutter to Auto in the shade the camera lowers the shutter to 1/30 and that fks the stabilization pretty badly
Yes, if you experience this then I recommend applying a solution I discuss in this video: ua-cam.com/video/e5Sx3s94syw/v-deo.html