Eric Horne
January 28th, 2009, 09:05 AM
Hey guys... new to the group, thanks for letting me in!
I am a hobbyist who happened to pick up a Canon XL2; the plan was to shoot youth sports but I've also been doing some indoor (dark) stage recording.
I've noticed on dark footage there there tended to be a blue haze on the left and right sides of the footage. Exploring this, I've discovered it is related to gain - anything above +3dB produces the haze. It exists on both sides on the blue channel, and much to my surprise only the left side on green and red.
In order to demonstrate this, I took a frame at low gain and differenced it against a frame taken at a high gain. I posted the pictures up here (http://dig.box11.org/XL2_issue/XL2_issue.html) if you want to see them (apologies for the crude site). The blue is a little hard to pick up against the black, but if you look closely you'll see it. Red and Green clearly show the problem. All frames were shot in my dark garage.
I've sent the camera in to Canon to fix this issue, they returned it (with a broken zoom) without apparently addressing this. Before I send it back to Canon for repair, does anyone have any thoughts on what might be wrong -- or even if this is wrong? (perhaps it's just the way the camera works).
In this case, I'm shooting 24p in low light with high gain (6db and over) at 16:9 aspect ratio. I don't know if this happens at 4:3. I'm pretty sure it happens at 30p as well (haven't tried 60i).
I appreciate any advice you folks might have about how I can correct this myself, or what words to use with Canon to convince them there is a problem (if there is one!)
Thank you!
I am a hobbyist who happened to pick up a Canon XL2; the plan was to shoot youth sports but I've also been doing some indoor (dark) stage recording.
I've noticed on dark footage there there tended to be a blue haze on the left and right sides of the footage. Exploring this, I've discovered it is related to gain - anything above +3dB produces the haze. It exists on both sides on the blue channel, and much to my surprise only the left side on green and red.
In order to demonstrate this, I took a frame at low gain and differenced it against a frame taken at a high gain. I posted the pictures up here (http://dig.box11.org/XL2_issue/XL2_issue.html) if you want to see them (apologies for the crude site). The blue is a little hard to pick up against the black, but if you look closely you'll see it. Red and Green clearly show the problem. All frames were shot in my dark garage.
I've sent the camera in to Canon to fix this issue, they returned it (with a broken zoom) without apparently addressing this. Before I send it back to Canon for repair, does anyone have any thoughts on what might be wrong -- or even if this is wrong? (perhaps it's just the way the camera works).
In this case, I'm shooting 24p in low light with high gain (6db and over) at 16:9 aspect ratio. I don't know if this happens at 4:3. I'm pretty sure it happens at 30p as well (haven't tried 60i).
I appreciate any advice you folks might have about how I can correct this myself, or what words to use with Canon to convince them there is a problem (if there is one!)
Thank you!