Selasa, 06 Mei 2014

Good Slow Motion video from a DV camcorder?

Q. I am looking for a software package to analyse baseball swings. I have a good DV damcorder.

A. The problem with DV for Slow motion is it only records 30 frames a second. I would think for something like analyzing a swing you would want a faster frame rate than that (120 frames per second) by shooting the video that fast, when you play it back at 30 frames per second you would have a nice clean image to study without a lot of motion blur.

Panasonic makes a High Definition camera that can do this, but it is expensive.

If you just want to look at regular video slow motion, Adobe Premiere has that capability (Final Cut Pro on the Mac) and I believe the consumer version of both those programs also have that capability. You also might try Vegas video from Sony, or Pinnacle.

Tony


what is a good quality consumer camcorder that has a slow motion feature?
Q. im looking for a camcorder that has high frames per second (fps) , that has pretty good quality and that also wont break the bank. Any recomendations would be most grateful, Thanks

A. Tony and Blue made suggestions, but did not answer your question directly.

The only manufacturer that makes useful stuff the consumer space that captures at faster than standard fps for slow motion playback is Sony. They have some consumer camcorders with a "SmoothSlowRecord" feature. The camcorder can burst capturing a higher rate of fps for 3 seconds - the playback time at standard playback fps is 12 seconds. Not all Sony camcorders have this - BEFORE YOU BUY THE CAMCORDER, download the manual from the support area at sony.com and read through it to be sure it has what you need and you understand how it is invoked and used.

If you require very specific industrial grade slow-motion, then you will need to get a high-speed industrial camera designed to capture fast moving activities. Using a regular consumer camcorder, the easiest and cheapest thing to do is to increase the shutter speed on the camcorder to 1/500 or 1/1000 (or faster if there is enough light). Then use the slow feature in your video editor.





Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar