The camera is comparable to a GoPro4. But with the advantage of a rectilinear lens (which still needs lens correction in my opinion, but it is A LOT less destructive than trying to fix a GoPro4 picture with its horrible fisheye). I can't really tell if that (cutout?) from a photo is particularly bad.
We could always wish for more. But lets face it - it is a small camera, comparable to a good point-and-shoot, not a DSLR or full-frame sensor etc. If you want a large camera flying you are talking a whole different animal. Much more complex, expensive and hassle.
One of the huge benefit of the Phantom 3 Pro camera is that you have a good deal of control over it and you can see what you shoot. And it is fantastic getting rid of the fisheye from the P2V+ and GoPros.
What I do most of the time, to maximize the output from the P3Pro camera is to shoot brackets (hold down the Shutter-button in the Pilot App, that opens a menu where you can select a number of shooting modes). Mostly 3-brackets, sometimes 5 if lighting conditions are really problematic or I want to be able to create a HDR-look. I then combine those and make HDR-photos that offer a great deal of freedom to tweak the look and get quality and detail in both dark and light areas. I also shoot in DNG and in LOG with 0 sharpness, -2 saturation, -2 contrast. That makes dull looking images out of the camera, but adds freedom to tweak the look, colors and contrast in post-production. I mainly use Lightroom 6 on a mac for photos.
- Buy your DJI Phantom 3, DJI-gear, intelligent DJI Batteries, DJI Hardshell Backpacks from the DJI Store by using this link - it'll help me out
|