- dapper.creations -

Roy1961

Senior Member
Contributor
its stops the camera shake when it doesn't find the natural shake from your hand, so on a wall of tripod you should turn your VR off.
 

Deezey

Senior Member
​Isn't camera shake bad??

The VR may in some cases still try and adjust for camera shake when locked down on a tripod or laid on an object. Basically the camera does not know you are not holding it and it is still trying to reduce vibrations.

So what will happen is you may end up with blurry shots even though you used a steady mounting surface. The VR introduces its own shake.

So when the camera is on a fixed object....turn VR off so the VR doesn't shake itself blurry. :D

Sent from my SCH-I405 using Tapatalk 2
 

dapper.creations

Senior Member
The VR may in some cases still try and adjust for camera shake when locked down on a tripod or laid on an object. Basically the camera does not know you are not holding it and it is still trying to reduce vibrations.

So what will happen is you may end up with blurry shots even though you used a steady mounting surface. The VR introduces its own shake.

So when the camera is on a fixed object....turn VR off so the VR doesn't shake itself blurry. :D

Sent from my SCH-I405 using Tapatalk 2

Oh ok, thank you for taking the time to explain!
 

mikew_RIP

Senior Member
No i dont think its under exposed but i may have tweaked the levels a bit.

9432209002_0ae376dc70_b.jpg

9432209002_0ae376dc70_bl.jpg

I could be accused of liking them a bit too bright though.

mike
 
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