How to get perfect Drone Camera Video Exposure: Shutter Speed

How to get perfect Drone Camera Video Exposure: Shutter Speed



Out and About this week.. so lets revisit the basics.. Today.. how to nail Shutter Speed in your drone camera settings. **IMPORTANT DRONE CONSULTATION** …

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About the Author: Ikopta

15 Comments

  1. Nice and useful video. Beginner Question: if I am doing 30fps, iso 100 which is minimum and I put shutter speed at 60 then there is way too much light and exposure is wrong. How do I solve that?

  2. good footage, also nice editing for your videos,its fun and entertaining . takes lots of effort. also quality , keep it going, ur channel deserve more. subscribed !

  3. These tutorials if you will will never get old! And I’m in US so not sure about my weight in On your DOT as we call it, but I would love to know and I’m not kidding what the queen must feel like ? with this tech after all the women has seen. And further more it scares me so much to think that our governments will take these technology’s away for there own use because of how beneficial they are going to become. This is why I like so much our regulating body’s make this field that we love require a certification to keep doing what it is we love so much. And I’m that quy that thinks my Country lets the bad apples spoil the whole damn bunch. Thanks D for all your knowledge. I bet you ole Harry and Wilhelm are loving this tech being pilots and all? Yeah that’s how us crazy Americans think. Good luck with regulations.

  4. I try to use 24fps on almost everything but, I often use 30 or 60 fps for sports or action to capture more detail in the movement. I just make sure that I adjust in post to match my frame rate so that when I upload the video it remains smooth and not jittery in playback.
    I haven't used slow motion very much yet, however, I will ve delving into that very soon!
    Thanks Dylan, as always, great content!

  5. Good explanation of the 180 rule but I would say personally that I think there are other factors at play too. If you are doing slow and smooth flying of landscape shots or slow moving/fixed shots of actors the 180 rule applies most of the time. However, i've found with faster moving perspective shots, compression and data rate turns your picture to mush. By increasing shutter speed up to around 1/100 i can retain detail and still maintain a natural looking motion blur. I have often had problems with the picture looking smeared at 1/50. Anyone else find this?

  6. Thank You very much for another great interesting video!! It's always big fun to watch Your videos, the way You make them is really exclusive, i'm a big fan so thank You very much. I'm looking forward to the next one…..????

  7. Always good to refresh and understand, although harder to achieve on the fly…..Right, I am looking at this government consultation, O.M.G how commercial do they want to make it! There are questions and questions on F.I.N.S, about who should be responsible, multiple agencies covering different areas, multiple F.I.N agencies….I don't work for BA or the RAF, I am just Hobbiest, with a passion for Arial perspective. The way this is going I will need to spend thousands getting my backside checked to see if it's clean enough to actually be considered to have a licence! Let alone the cash that I may have to pay for the privilege of actually flying my really expensive camera. I'm British, which means I will nod like a donkey and get on with it……where is the queue??

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