CraigR
 lvl.4
Australia
Offline
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I'd love it to be adjustable. +/- 0.3 of a stop is not particularly useful in situations where I'd normally (on a DSLR) resort to AEB.
That said, the EXIF data attached to Phantom4pro shots is extremely confusing. If I take 3 bracketed shots, for example, the f-stop, aperture and exposure time remain the same. This isn't how AEB bracketing works... on any other camera in the world the exposure time would change for each shot. The only difference between the three shots is that the exposure bias is different for each of them. This made me wonder if there was some trickery involved. Three photos, in this example, certainly are taken and can easily be proven by taking a bracketed shot of a moving subject. But does exposure time change for each shot? I'm still not sure. My initial hypothesis was that it wasn't so I did some tests. I began my experiment by making the following statements:
(a) If the exposure time (shutter speed) was actually being changed but not reflected in the EXIF data then the underexposed shot should exibit about the same amount of noise as the overexposed shot
(b) If the exposure time remained fixed for all 3 shots and there was some internal trickery going on then the underexposed shot should have more sensor noise than the overexposed shot
So I set everything up and took three shots in almost complete darkness but with some very dim ambient light on the right hand side of each shot (from the lights inside my house; I took the 3 shots in darkness at about midnight).
In post-processing I pushed the exposure up by 4 stops (you'd never do this in real life) so that I could start looking at the noise in each photo. To my surprise, based on the EXIF, the amount of sensor noise in each of the 3 shots was basically the same; thus supporting statement (a). Further, I could only see the light reflected off the ground (I didn't launch the craft) from the P4P's lights in the +0.33 shot no matter how much I pushed the exposure up in the other two shots. So, that further supports that there is no trickery going on. But then how can the EXIF data be explained? Is it incorrect? The difference in the exposure time between 0 and +/- 0.33 EV wouldn't be much so I couldn't determine by ear if each shot did seem to have a different exposure time. It makes me uneasy.
Anyway, I drifted off on a tanget. +/-0.33 stop bracketing is basically useless so yes a user-defined value would be very, very welcome.
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