Thanks for the input guys!pjotrtje wrote:Using Mode 1 (stabilizing both axes) half the gyros are constantly trying to cope with the panning movement. As the lenses inside are connected to the gyros inexplicable blur can take place. As such: Mode 2 is the one and only mode to use for fast moving objects.
A gyro will try to stabilise against your intentional panning movement. So, it is useless to do that and if it wasn't harmful, no problem would arise. The issue is that the gyro will most probably cause an uneven panning: the image will skip when the gyro is trying to reset itself to the new position. Imagine trying a picture during that skip: one part of the pic will become blurred. I do agree however, it doesn't happen a lot. But if it happens during the one and only Indonesian F-16 you come across...geert99 wrote:I don't want to sound ignorant, but why is it bad that the mode 1 tries to stabilize both axis?
Thanks for the more detailed explanation guys! I think I understand now, so I will surely try that in the coming shooting events.pjotrtje wrote:A gyro will try to stabilise against your intentional panning movement. So, it is useless to do that and if it wasn't harmful, no problem would arise. The issue is that the gyro will most probably cause an uneven panning: the image will skip when the gyro is trying to reset itself to the new position. Imagine trying a picture during that skip: one part of the pic will become blurred. I do agree however, it doesn't happen a lot. But if it happens during the one and only Indonesian F-16 you come across...geert99 wrote:I don't want to sound ignorant, but why is it bad that the mode 1 tries to stabilize both axis?
I am not aware of any detrimental effect on the gyro itself, though panning with Mode 1 working is harder than it is in Mode 2: you're working against the effects of the gyro and as you may have learned in school, trying to move a running gyro is difficult.
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