| NV-GS17 "double" images of sports action
Question of EyTschej: Januar 2008
I have the recording, unfortunately, an international bicycle race "double" images, which are not related to the whole picture, but only on the fast objects, so the racers in this case. In the recording mode, I used extra sport mode.
You should better start in normal mode?
Or has someone other tips on how to record such images without such "double images"?
I hold suspect that you can save as with the post any more, but that it s.der Recording s.sich lies. To illustrate the following picture:
for image
Reply steve:
This message has already decomposed ...
Reply EyTschej:
The problem has nothing to do with interlacing, because then you would have these stripes - but they've rausgefiltert. It is about the double images, as shown in the example image.
And before the question arises: Why did the deinterlacing filter uses of Virtual Dub. I have done in the past and has always Tuck easily removed - this time synonymous
Reply mkrawietz:
had the problem once synonymous with nem cheap sony ... for image
but it has to eingekriegt ner time of their own, n.wieso: D
But you are right, this is definitely not interlacing ...
Reply EyTschej:
What brings me back to the suspicion that this problem has to do with the recording. I have not even included himself (was one of the drivers, lol), but the first time we took the on believe in normal mode, only the second time in Sport mode.
Perhaps lost hold another owner of this or a similar Panasonic here in this thread and can say more about the shooting modes in practice. But perhaps we are synonymous simply driving too fast for the camera eye, hehe ...
Reply Schleichmichel:
There is DEFINITELY something to do with interlacing.
@ EyTschej: Even though I'm not THAT familiar with Virtual Dub ... it will be because rausgefiltert no stripes or eliminated. It sounds as though you would not quite understand the procedure. There are various controls, how to make pseudo-frames from the interlaced fields. In the examples shown were of you, both images and Interpolated übereinendergelegt.
In the "sport" mode, the exposure times are probably shorter. Then this effect occurs in this transformation method here especially strong because the bikers are frozen in each half-image as. With longer exposure times, they would merge by the motion blur by the superimposition of the images used here is more '. "
@ Snowboarders: And something Eneke not so synonymous with the ON time. I rather type that you consciously or unconsciously turn another way to have selected. Perhaps, however, has been synonymous attitudes changed by the loss of preferences, resulting in eingekriegt the "has".
Wonderful digital world ...
Reply steve:
But you are right, this is definitely not interlacing ...
Have fun with discuss ...
Reply Markus:
In the "sport" mode, the exposure times are probably shorter. Not only likely, this is indeed so. The sport mode is only interesting if you need still images without motion blur.
Otherwise you film sports events in the normal mode with the standard shutter speed of 1 / 50 s. In order to see movements significantly smoother. ;-)
Reply EyTschej:
So with other words, the sport mode is not suitable for sports shots? : p
I once just messing around in Virtual Dub with the various methods and interlace with Duplicate it was - at least in the preview window. Get it all re-encode later times, but should bring the same positive result. Was it but interlacing.
Finally, I ask only this question in the space: If you want to start a bike race, therefore, one does then the s.besten in normal or sport mode?
Reply Markus:
So if you want to start a bike race, then you're doing the s.besten in normal or sport mode? Answer: as above:
The sport mode is only interesting if you need still images without motion blur.
Otherwise you film sports events in the normal mode with the standard shutter speed of 1 / 50 s. In order to see movements significantly smoother. ;-) TV broadcasts will be held synonymous with 1 / 50 s exposure time. Jerky movements, acting as a spectator would not "correct" feel.
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