DPReview.com is closing April 10th - Find out more

Is it normal for the burst rate to slow down when you stop down the aperture?

Started Feb 9, 2020 | Questions thread
Alastair Norcross
Alastair Norcross Veteran Member • Posts: 9,874
Comparison with M6

Wintereater wrote:

Did you actually observe your aperture as I recommended? It’ll be an eye-opener. At many exposure combinations the lens will remain stopped down or partially stopped down (in Servo AF mode). The ISO and E/V of the scene will also affect this. If you watch, you’ll see that the aperture will remain (wide) open at other times.

I’d presume that this behavior is to facilitate AF (and maybe other functions?)

I did check, and it behaves like I though it would (opening up all the way between shots during burst mode). I even set the aperture to the smallest it can go. I tested it in bright environments and dark environments and the behavior is mostly the same.

Maybe try resetting your camera back to Factory Default (always a good starting point).

I haven't tried resetting. I was hoping that someone with similar canon cameras would test theirs out to see if the same thing happens lol.

I still have my M6, as well as M6II, so I just tested the M6. Here's what I found. With EF-M mount lenses (I tested the EF-M 18-55 and the Sigma EF-M 16 F1.4) I notice no slowdown from 7fps when stopping down. However, when I use EF lenses with the adapter (I tested the EF 50 F1.8STM and the EF 85 F1.8), I do notice a significant slowdown when stopping down, even a little. I would say that it slows from 7fps to around 4fps. It's certainly a big enough difference that you can hear it right away. So, from this quick test at least, with the M6 it seems to be an adapter issue (I'm using Canon adapters).

True. As to why your framerate is slowed in One Shot AF mode, perhaps the lens is partly to blame. Check lens firmware?

Everything is up to date.

I don’t recall a slowed framerate when I had my M5. I always had all in-camera processing disabled though. Check all of your settings.

I might try that. Even things like chromatic aberration correction and periphery illumination correct?

Since you mention that your Canon lens exhibits largely the same issue, it has to be something common to both (as you’ve been speculating). Have you tested this in different environments? You aren’t using flash by chance? (The M5’s responsiveness is slowed greatly).

I tested it in both light and dark environments, and the amount that it slows down seems unrelated to the light levels and ISO. No flash.

Thanks for your input.

-- hide signature --

As the length of a thread approaches 150, the probability that someone will make the obvious "it's not the camera, it's the photographer" remark approaches 1.
Alastair
http://anorcross.smugmug.com
Equipment in profile

 Alastair Norcross's gear list:Alastair Norcross's gear list
Canon G7 X II Canon EOS M6 II Canon EOS R7 Canon EOS R6 Mark II Canon RF 35mm F1.8 IS STM Macro +24 more
Post (hide subjects) Posted by
Keyboard shortcuts:
FForum PPrevious NNext WNext unread UUpvote SSubscribe RReply QQuote BBookmark MMy threads
Color scheme? Blue / Yellow