Mike Thomann
March 31st, 2008, 02:34 AM
I've read in a few places now that that the EX1 loses resolution in motion. Here's one of the more descriptive explanations of someone's experience...
"the EX1 can deliver a noticeably sharper image especially on a static shot. In 720p mode they're very comparable, in 1080 mode the EX1 pulls significantly ahead in terms of sharpness -- as long as the camera isn't moving. In motion the resolution drops off a lot, and they end up being about the same on a pan. I don't understand the exact reasons why this happens (although I have my suspicions) but it's not something I'd blame on MPEG-2; it happens on the live output. In fact, it happens on the cam's own LCD -- go to 100% wide angle, turn on peaking (especially in yellow) and shoot some trees, etc. You should see a sea of yellow peaking. Now pan side to side, and all your peaking disappears until you stop moving. That doesn't happen on an HVX or, well, any other camera I can think of, but it happens on the Sony."
"My theory is that they're doing some aggressive noise reduction algorithms, averaging frames together to bring the noise down, and moving the camera averages out that fine detail. It results in great-looking static shots but the shots go softer in motion. (btw, this actually helps the MPEG encoding, so I'm not saying it's a bad design decision, but just be aware that the super-sharp frame grabs you're going to see from this camera don't necessarily translate into super-sharp motion footage)."
...Notice they say they haven't seen this in other cameras. Any thoughts or experiences anyone?
"the EX1 can deliver a noticeably sharper image especially on a static shot. In 720p mode they're very comparable, in 1080 mode the EX1 pulls significantly ahead in terms of sharpness -- as long as the camera isn't moving. In motion the resolution drops off a lot, and they end up being about the same on a pan. I don't understand the exact reasons why this happens (although I have my suspicions) but it's not something I'd blame on MPEG-2; it happens on the live output. In fact, it happens on the cam's own LCD -- go to 100% wide angle, turn on peaking (especially in yellow) and shoot some trees, etc. You should see a sea of yellow peaking. Now pan side to side, and all your peaking disappears until you stop moving. That doesn't happen on an HVX or, well, any other camera I can think of, but it happens on the Sony."
"My theory is that they're doing some aggressive noise reduction algorithms, averaging frames together to bring the noise down, and moving the camera averages out that fine detail. It results in great-looking static shots but the shots go softer in motion. (btw, this actually helps the MPEG encoding, so I'm not saying it's a bad design decision, but just be aware that the super-sharp frame grabs you're going to see from this camera don't necessarily translate into super-sharp motion footage)."
...Notice they say they haven't seen this in other cameras. Any thoughts or experiences anyone?