Vince Denali
June 27th, 2003, 04:57 PM
Hi,
I was taping a Muay Thai (Thailand style) kickboxing event with my Sony vx-2000. The ring was illuminated by three, dome-shaped high output flourescent lights mounted on the ceiling. I'm not sure if they are HMI, but they were pretty quiet. Similar looking units at Home Depot buzz like killer bees. Anyway, in AES mode (shutter priority), I noticed a brightness oscillaton with a period of about four seconds. As I increased the shutter speed from 1/30 to 1/1000, it got worse. The period didn't increase, but the peaks and troughs of the brightness oscillation deepened. When I switched the camera to fully Automatic operation (manual focus, though) or AEA (aperture priority mode),
the oscillation largely went away. I'm not sure if the oscillation was caused by the mismatch of my video frame rate and the flourescent light frequency or that the three lights were not in sync with each other. What should I do in the future to avoid the brightness oscillationr? I want a faster shutter speed to reduce the blur of the fast motion.
I was taping a Muay Thai (Thailand style) kickboxing event with my Sony vx-2000. The ring was illuminated by three, dome-shaped high output flourescent lights mounted on the ceiling. I'm not sure if they are HMI, but they were pretty quiet. Similar looking units at Home Depot buzz like killer bees. Anyway, in AES mode (shutter priority), I noticed a brightness oscillaton with a period of about four seconds. As I increased the shutter speed from 1/30 to 1/1000, it got worse. The period didn't increase, but the peaks and troughs of the brightness oscillation deepened. When I switched the camera to fully Automatic operation (manual focus, though) or AEA (aperture priority mode),
the oscillation largely went away. I'm not sure if the oscillation was caused by the mismatch of my video frame rate and the flourescent light frequency or that the three lights were not in sync with each other. What should I do in the future to avoid the brightness oscillationr? I want a faster shutter speed to reduce the blur of the fast motion.