cpsico said:I remember reading the higher flash sync is better achieved on the crop sensorsbriansquibb said:neuroanatomist said:Haven't heard any rumors, but the 1D X only manages 1/250 s, same as the 1DsIII. I think the 5DIII will stay at 1/200 s.
Strange the 1d4 is 1/300 - usefull for the 70-200 on a 1.3![]()
The sync speed is the fastest speed at which the entire sensor is exposed at once. At faster than max sync speed, only parts of the sensor are exposed at a time so if the flash fires (when it's not HSS) it gets only part of the image, and thus banding. There are two curtains that travel over the sensor that must traverse a larger distance on a full frame camera. Smaller travel distances = higher possible sync speeds.Emeyerphoto said:zCould you explain further why 1/250 worked on a film camera but only full frame digital cameras only allow 1/200?
Emeyerphoto said:I don't believe this argument. If it was better achieved on the crop sensors, then why did the EOS 1, EOS 1n, and 1V all have 1/250 sync speed? If I am mistaken, I apologize but these are film cameras so the full frame versus crop sensor frame reasoning seems odd to me. If the argument of crop sensors only achieving this sync speed, then they would all have sync speeds of 1/200 or possibly less. Could you explain further why 1/250 worked on a film camera but only full frame digital cameras only allow 1/200?
Flake said:Just to stir the mud a little more, the G12 will sync without using HSS at 1/4000th although for some odd reason not with the ST-E2 where it's a little slower. It's left me wondering the kind of shutter the G1X is going to have, focal plane as per the NEX or electronic like the G12.
neuroanatomist said:Flake said:Just to stir the mud a little more, the G12 will sync without using HSS at 1/4000th although for some odd reason not with the ST-E2 where it's a little slower. It's left me wondering the kind of shutter the G1X is going to have, focal plane as per the NEX or electronic like the G12.
Does the G1X have a focal plane shutter? My guess based on the above is no - a 1/4000 sync speed means electronic 'curtains'.
Viggo said:neuroanatomist said:Flake said:Just to stir the mud a little more, the G12 will sync without using HSS at 1/4000th although for some odd reason not with the ST-E2 where it's a little slower. It's left me wondering the kind of shutter the G1X is going to have, focal plane as per the NEX or electronic like the G12.
Does the G1X have a focal plane shutter? My guess based on the above is no - a 1/4000 sync speed means electronic 'curtains'.
I used to have a Sony compact that also synced at 1/1000s and froze action like nothing else. I understand how the shutter of an SLR works, but I have never thought of what the negative sides to an electronic "curtain" is? Can someone fill me in? Why doesn't the slr's use electronic "curtains"? You could still have the mirror and everything, right?
7enderbender said:Viggo said:neuroanatomist said:Flake said:Just to stir the mud a little more, the G12 will sync without using HSS at 1/4000th although for some odd reason not with the ST-E2 where it's a little slower. It's left me wondering the kind of shutter the G1X is going to have, focal plane as per the NEX or electronic like the G12.
Does the G1X have a focal plane shutter? My guess based on the above is no - a 1/4000 sync speed means electronic 'curtains'.
I used to have a Sony compact that also synced at 1/1000s and froze action like nothing else. I understand how the shutter of an SLR works, but I have never thought of what the negative sides to an electronic "curtain" is? Can someone fill me in? Why doesn't the slr's use electronic "curtains"? You could still have the mirror and everything, right?
I'm sure others will provide more detail on this but I believe it has to do with the sensor type. The G12 has a CCD sensor while the Canon SLRs have CMOS sensors. From all I know there are pros and cons to both types but what you describe is one difference where it's easier to accomplish different behaviors in one way or another.
Leaf shutters like on medium format cameras would be another option to increase sync speed.
In any case, neither have anything to do with freezing action since you can do that even at slow shutter speeds. Things like high speed sync (or high shutter sync speeds) are more important to control ambient light.
Viggo said:neuroanatomist said:Flake said:Just to stir the mud a little more, the G12 will sync without using HSS at 1/4000th although for some odd reason not with the ST-E2 where it's a little slower. It's left me wondering the kind of shutter the G1X is going to have, focal plane as per the NEX or electronic like the G12.
Does the G1X have a focal plane shutter? My guess based on the above is no - a 1/4000 sync speed means electronic 'curtains'.
I used to have a Sony compact that also synced at 1/1000s and froze action like nothing else. I understand how the shutter of an SLR works, but I have never thought of what the negative sides to an electronic "curtain" is? Can someone fill me in? Why doesn't the slr's use electronic "curtains"? You could still have the mirror and everything, right?
Flake said:Viggo said:neuroanatomist said:Flake said:Just to stir the mud a little more, the G12 will sync without using HSS at 1/4000th although for some odd reason not with the ST-E2 where it's a little slower. It's left me wondering the kind of shutter the G1X is going to have, focal plane as per the NEX or electronic like the G12.
Does the G1X have a focal plane shutter? My guess based on the above is no - a 1/4000 sync speed means electronic 'curtains'.
Thanks! That explains a lot!
I used to have a Sony compact that also synced at 1/1000s and froze action like nothing else. I understand how the shutter of an SLR works, but I have never thought of what the negative sides to an electronic "curtain" is? Can someone fill me in? Why doesn't the slr's use electronic "curtains"? You could still have the mirror and everything, right?
Lag is the reason for a focal plane shutter. Compact cameras continually read image data from the sensor when the shutter is pressed the sensor has to first be cleared, then allowed to expose for a set period before it's read & then wiped again, it all takes time, not a huge amount and compact cameras are much more responsive than they used to be, but still nothing like as fast as a DSLR.
Neuro I think you miss read my post, I can get the G12 to sync at 1/4000th I've no idea what the G1X will sync at just wondering as it has a much bigger sensor, and the NEX which is the nearest equivalent does use the focal plane shutter (and very noisy it is too!)
Emeyerphoto said:With the D800 release will we now see 1/250 sync speed? This camera is full frame and hopefully this debunks the idea that you can't do 1/250 in a mid-upper level FF DSLR.
7enderbender said:Viggo said:neuroanatomist said:Flake said:Just to stir the mud a little more, the G12 will sync without using HSS at 1/4000th although for some odd reason not with the ST-E2 where it's a little slower. It's left me wondering the kind of shutter the G1X is going to have, focal plane as per the NEX or electronic like the G12.
Does the G1X have a focal plane shutter? My guess based on the above is no - a 1/4000 sync speed means electronic 'curtains'.
I used to have a Sony compact that also synced at 1/1000s and froze action like nothing else. I understand how the shutter of an SLR works, but I have never thought of what the negative sides to an electronic "curtain" is? Can someone fill me in? Why doesn't the slr's use electronic "curtains"? You could still have the mirror and everything, right?
I'm sure others will provide more detail on this but I believe it has to do with the sensor type. The G12 has a CCD sensor while the Canon SLRs have CMOS sensors. From all I know there are pros and cons to both types but what you describe is one difference where it's easier to accomplish different behaviors in one way or another.
Leaf shutters like on medium format cameras would be another option to increase sync speed.
In any case, neither have anything to do with freezing action since you can do that even at slow shutter speeds. Things like high speed sync (or high shutter sync speeds) are more important to control ambient light.