Friday, September 11, 2009
Melting
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Thursday, September 10, 2009
What You Don't Understand, You Make Mean Anything
About 18 months ago, I bought a Canon Rebel XSi digital SLR camera.
I love it.
I love that I can change the lens out to suit a particular situation. I love that I can use an external flash to bounce artificial light. I love that the camera fires as soon as I depress the button.
I was just messing around with auto exposure bracketing, and seeing how fast I could take 3 continuous shots (for use with HDR imaging). Although the camera is rated at 3.5 exposures per second, I was noticing that I was only getting 2, and only for the first second. Subsequent exposures came at a rate of only 1 per second. What the heck!?
I shoot in RAW mode, which generates very large files – somewhere on the order of 13-15 MB each. Maybe the bottleneck was caused by the write-speed from my camera to memory card. So I tried switching back to JPEGs. Same problem. “Hmmm… maybe they’re still too big…” So I switched to the smallest setting. Same problem. Uh oh… prepare for camera repair…
Then I remembered.
When I first got the camera, one of the touted features was on-camera “High ISO Noise Reduction.” Noise is the digital equivalent to grain. As you use a higher ISO setting, you can get better exposures with less light – the trade-off is more noise. This feature helps reduce the noise (read more here).
Noise reduction off | Noise reduction on |
Excited by the prospect of reduced noise, I turned the feature on. What I didn’t notice is that it drops the cameras burst rate down to 2. Well… that explains it. I turned the feature off and, voila, I can now capture 7 consecutive exposures in 2 seconds.
The worst/best part is: I shoot RAW (and process with Adobe Camera Raw), so the on-camera processing is ignored anyway.
The lesson for me is to not get feature happy. If you don’t understand how it works, don’t enable it.
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