I heard the max exposure setting is 1 second? You need at least 8 or 10 to get a good starry image. There’s no way to get beyond that 1 second? If not I’ll skip the version 3 I guess.
@@BommeltjeNL that's correct, some have said if you set ISO low and put shutter speed on auto it will go longer, but you lose control of it and obviously lose all your light gathering gains since you have to set the ISO so low, unacceptable in my opinion in this day and age!
Have you tried brightening the image in post? If you're using such low iso, there should be no noise at all.. Im just going by the theory - aperture and shutter speed is what exposes the image. The iso is just after the exposure amplifier of the brightness, thats why you get noise above certain threshold. So maybe, if you set to fixed 400 iso, and because of that camera bumps the shutter to speed to more than 1 second (lets say 8 seconds, of course depending on the interval setting in your timelapse) then it would be possible to brighten the image without the noise? @pdub422
1600 ISO, 1" exposure, AWB, 15s intervals, hoping to do another longer one thos weekend to experiment some more, I'll post it if I get another clear night!
@@yamahass66 yes I am hoping for the same thing, can't believe they have a 1" sensor but tie it's hands with only a 1 sec max exposure! I think it could get some really cool night lapses with longer exposure times!
@pdub422 Yes there is some very strange things in the options. Thankfully they seems to listening. We need to tell them this by sending emails. Yes I think it would benefit much since noise reduction is very high at higher iso.
@@yamahass66 They are listening? No they are not. Last month I wrote about this on official DJI forums and one person from DJI R&D replied with this message: 'Hi due to sensor limitation Pocket3 does not provide shutter longer than 1 seconds. (just as most flagship smart phones ) we tried however It is not a firmware thing...' Firstly he lies. Pocket 3 certainly can expose more than 1 second but only in semi automatic mode. if you manually adjust ISO too low, then camera increases exposure time automatically to compensate. Try it yourself, set iso to 200 or 50 and you'll notice camera exposes longer. But the end result is still a dark image. Secondly he has no idea about sensors because he says 'just like flagship smartphones'. What the hell? My Samsung S23 Ultra can expose for 30 seconds. I used many flagship ones before and they all could expose for more than 1 second. Let me tell you the real possible reasons: 1) They are incompetent to implement this feature. 2) They want to create artificial demand for next camera by removing certain features like this, only to add them in Pocket 4.
this is fantastic . see ya~😈
Thank you!
Trying this tonight!
Quels réglages ? j'ai fais pareil, mais il y as moins d'étoiles et Jupiter est plus petit sur mon time lapse, comment obtenir les mêmes images merci.
I heard the max exposure setting is 1 second? You need at least 8 or 10 to get a good starry image. There’s no way to get beyond that 1 second? If not I’ll skip the version 3 I guess.
@@BommeltjeNL that's correct, some have said if you set ISO low and put shutter speed on auto it will go longer, but you lose control of it and obviously lose all your light gathering gains since you have to set the ISO so low, unacceptable in my opinion in this day and age!
Have you tried brightening the image in post? If you're using such low iso, there should be no noise at all..
Im just going by the theory - aperture and shutter speed is what exposes the image. The iso is just after the exposure amplifier of the brightness, thats why you get noise above certain threshold. So maybe, if you set to fixed 400 iso, and because of that camera bumps the shutter to speed to more than 1 second (lets say 8 seconds, of course depending on the interval setting in your timelapse) then it would be possible to brighten the image without the noise? @pdub422
What settings did you use?
1600 ISO, 1" exposure, AWB, 15s intervals, hoping to do another longer one thos weekend to experiment some more, I'll post it if I get another clear night!
@@pdub422 Thanks, hopfully dji adds up to 30sec in next firmware.
@@yamahass66 yes I am hoping for the same thing, can't believe they have a 1" sensor but tie it's hands with only a 1 sec max exposure! I think it could get some really cool night lapses with longer exposure times!
@pdub422 Yes there is some very strange things in the options. Thankfully they seems to listening. We need to tell them this by sending emails. Yes I think it would benefit much since noise reduction is very high at higher iso.
@@yamahass66 They are listening? No they are not. Last month I wrote about this on official DJI forums and one person from DJI R&D replied with this message:
'Hi due to sensor limitation Pocket3 does not provide shutter longer than 1 seconds. (just as most flagship smart phones ) we tried however It is not a firmware thing...'
Firstly he lies. Pocket 3 certainly can expose more than 1 second but only in semi automatic mode. if you manually adjust ISO too low, then camera increases exposure time automatically to compensate. Try it yourself, set iso to 200 or 50 and you'll notice camera exposes longer. But the end result is still a dark image.
Secondly he has no idea about sensors because he says 'just like flagship smartphones'. What the hell? My Samsung S23 Ultra can expose for 30 seconds. I used many flagship ones before and they all could expose for more than 1 second.
Let me tell you the real possible reasons:
1) They are incompetent to implement this feature.
2) They want to create artificial demand for next camera by removing certain features like this, only to add them in Pocket 4.