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Corsa Sport » Message Board » Off Day » Geek Day » Go pro settings » Post Reply
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Nic Barnes |
posted on 22nd Nov 15 at 19:57 |
My original one couldn't pick anything up at all. Was a go pro 1. | |
Steve |
posted on 22nd Nov 15 at 10:39 |
Pro tune will look shite until you import it via gopro studio then apply the protune post process filter then it will look better than stuff filmed with the camera auto processing. Having said that I wouldn't use protune for low light stuff. There is specific iso settings in the camera for low light stuff. | |
Nic Barnes |
posted on 21st Nov 15 at 23:23 |
Find it odd having the photos in a wide lense format I know you can change that I just didn't to see what they looked like. Probably better than what my phone can do so that's cool. | |
Nic Barnes |
posted on 21st Nov 15 at 23:22 |
Nic Barnes |
posted on 21st Nov 15 at 23:20 |
Nic Barnes |
posted on 21st Nov 15 at 23:19 |
Took some photos today with it knocking pro tune off come out ok. | |
DaveyLC |
posted on 17th Nov 15 at 11:59 |
Go pros are pretty shit in low light.. | |
Nic Barnes |
posted on 17th Nov 15 at 11:51 |
I was trying in in 4K. Normally film in 1080p for biking stuff and that seems fine. I think pro tune needs knocked off. | |
SteveoBC |
posted on 17th Nov 15 at 11:32 |
yeh protune seem to fuck a few things up | |
Nic Barnes |
posted on 17th Nov 15 at 11:26 |
I went to see Durham lumiere on the weekend and thought I would try and record it using my go pro 4. Now some of the stuff came out ok, but the main bit which was the protection on to th cathedral didn't work so well. Is there a specific useful setting/set up to use for low light night time? It was set on pro tune, which after a quick search may have been a bad thing to use? |