Sir, I'm inclined to think you have a last-gen action camera, such as a DJI OA4, OA5, or GoPro Hero 12 or 13. Your video however looks very blurry. You can try keeping the shutter speed above 1/200 s and increasing the export bit rate. Awesome trail video, however.
@@thebigoutsidemtb With the Osmo, once your shutter speed is lower than 1/200 s AND you have stabilization enabled, you can see an undesirable ghosting effect, more than motion blur. The solution for that is increasing shutter speed to a minimum of 1/200 s, or disabling stabilization, the latter of which is not an option while mountain biking. The alternative would be adding motion blur in post to regain the effect you lose when increasing shutter speed.
You’re slipping because it’s too wet to ride… grab a shovel and start digging/repairing trails instead of making UC worse. You are most definitely a rincon lot legend.
Actually, the trails I was riding handle the wet like stuff you would find in Squamish. Roots that have any moisture are going to be slippery so you just have to ride everything in a different way as you don't have tractions in the same areas as if it was dry. Haha, that's cool to hear! I do get a lot of people recognize be in the lot 😅
@@thebigoutsidemtb Don't listen to him, the majority of riders know exactly what trails get damaged when ridden wet and they are on the majority all climbing or beginner/intermediate trails. Steep technical descents are fine to ride wet. They can easily be repaired if need be and it's generally just catchers that get damaged. If you can't handle wet roots and rocks then you should be inside gloomily staring out of the window with a cup of Bovril.
Hell yeah. Merry Christmas dude🤘🤘
Thanks dude, Merry Christmas to you too!
Sir, I'm inclined to think you have a last-gen action camera, such as a DJI OA4, OA5, or GoPro Hero 12 or 13. Your video however looks very blurry. You can try keeping the shutter speed above 1/200 s and increasing the export bit rate. Awesome trail video, however.
I think you mean the motion blur? That was on purpose as it shows more speed. I'm using a GoPro Hero 12 Black. So yes, a newer camera. Thanks man 🤙
@@thebigoutsidemtb With the Osmo, once your shutter speed is lower than 1/200 s AND you have stabilization enabled, you can see an undesirable ghosting effect, more than motion blur. The solution for that is increasing shutter speed to a minimum of 1/200 s, or disabling stabilization, the latter of which is not an option while mountain biking.
The alternative would be adding motion blur in post to regain the effect you lose when increasing shutter speed.
Was that this morning? We'll be out there tomorrow.
No, this was 2 weeks ago.
What bike are you riding?
Looks like a Santa Cruz heckler sl
Santa Cruz Bronson
Nope, not an E-Bike. Santa Cruz Bronson
You’re slipping because it’s too wet to ride… grab a shovel and start digging/repairing trails instead of making UC worse. You are most definitely a rincon lot legend.
Actually, the trails I was riding handle the wet like stuff you would find in Squamish. Roots that have any moisture are going to be slippery so you just have to ride everything in a different way as you don't have tractions in the same areas as if it was dry.
Haha, that's cool to hear! I do get a lot of people recognize be in the lot 😅
@@thebigoutsidemtb Don't listen to him, the majority of riders know exactly what trails get damaged when ridden wet and they are on the majority all climbing or beginner/intermediate trails. Steep technical descents are fine to ride wet.
They can easily be repaired if need be and it's generally just catchers that get damaged.
If you can't handle wet roots and rocks then you should be inside gloomily staring out of the window with a cup of Bovril.
this is a mile from my house @thebigoutsidemtb
Nice!