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Re: My lens has a spot on it, is there anything I can do?
You probably need a head that will cost a sizeable amount of money for long lens work. Just touching the pan handle moves the image quite a bit with even a very delicate touch.
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Re: My lens has a spot on it, is there anything I can do?
Don't know if your camera has stabilization but I have gotten good results with my GH5 using 75-300 (600mm effective) with e-stabilization "on" mounted on a $300 tripod and tracking subject with continuous auto-focus on.
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Re: My lens has a spot on it, is there anything I can do?
Oh ok. I dont think the camera has stabilization but tthe lens does.
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Re: My lens has a spot on it, is there anything I can do?
Does stabilisation work for video? I thought it was only for stills?
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Re: My lens has a spot on it, is there anything I can do?
On Ryan's lens, IS should be switched *off* when shooting from a tripod.
Otherwise it'll fight the pan. Okay to have it on when handheld, though. Mark's in-body stab. is designed to work with a tripod. That's the difference. |
Re: My lens has a spot on it, is there anything I can do?
Oh ok. How does the lens fight the pan? Is that why in the footage if i pan right, it jerks left sometimes, And vice versa?
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Re: My lens has a spot on it, is there anything I can do?
Yes, what you describe is exactly what I mean by "fighting the pan."
Your particular lens was designed only as a still-photo lens. It was never intended for video. When you have the lens on a tripod with the IS switched on, it doesn't know that your panning movement is intentional. So it fights that motion, resulting in the little "hiccups" you're getting at the end of a pan. Therefore you need to turn IS *off* when shooting video with that lens from a tripod. Newer, better lenses will accommodate tripod shooting with a special mode designed to work with intentional panning movements. Some lenses have multiple IS modes. Yours does not, however. |
Re: My lens has a spot on it, is there anything I can do?
I won't lie, I honestly that was also the deal with camcorders where the IS is built in. I had always heard the rule as "tripod = no IS" (at least if you're gonna be panning). Maybe that's older cams or I'm dumb or something.
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Re: My lens has a spot on it, is there anything I can do?
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What if for when I am using a gimbal with a wider lens for wide shots? Should I have IS switched on or off for that? |
Re: My lens has a spot on it, is there anything I can do?
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Re: My lens has a spot on it, is there anything I can do?
Is e-stabilization and IS the same thing?
It seems to me that every time I find out about something electronic in the lens, it's a disavantage. I find out that the lens is fly-by-wire focus, and now I find out that IS has been fighting my panning. Are there any DSLR lenses out therefore, that are telephoto, have no electronic components and are all manual mechanical? Would that be better and less complications? |
Re: My lens has a spot on it, is there anything I can do?
Is the stabilization in the lens or body in that case?
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Re: My lens has a spot on it, is there anything I can do?
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Re: My lens has a spot on it, is there anything I can do?
welp that explains it...I don't shoot much and when I do it's almost always with a C100 with the typical still lenses or an EX1.
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Re: My lens has a spot on it, is there anything I can do?
Mark's GH5 has e-stab. in the camera body (I think).
OIS (optical) is a lens mechanism. It's found in lenses and on camera bodies that have an integrated lens built in. EIS (electronic) is a function of the image sensor in a camera body. Not as effective as OIS in a lens. There's also IBIS, in-body image stabilization, on some newer camera bodies. I understand it's very good. Usually when you have IBIS, there's most often an included mode specifically for using with a tripod. |
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