Re: Fujifilm X-H2 and Electronic Shutter
2
Truman Prevatt wrote:
goodbokeh wrote:
Sgt_Strider wrote:
From what I gather so far, it seems like the e-shutter is nowhere close to being as fast as the X-H2S so rolling shutter will be a problem. However, I'm now reading that some people still intend to buy this camera for shooting movies? Whoa? Am I missing something here? After using an e-shutter, I hesitate to go back to the mechanical shutter for fear of shutter shock despite the supposed improvement Fujifilm made. What do you guys think? I really wish DPR and everyone else will go in-depth about the e-shutter in their eventual review.
You may be conflating two concepts: E-shutter that is used for all videos and mechanical shutter shock for still photos. Most modern Fuji cameras have an alternative shutter setting (to full mechanical shutter) called E-Front Curtain Shutter. It is often set as the factory default and can be combined with full mechanical at higher shutter speeds for IQ benefits where shutter shock is not a problem.
E-Front Curtain Shutter has been adopted by most camera companies: Sony, Canon, Nikon, Fuji, Panasonic (Lumix), Olympus and others. It has proven to be very effective at substantially reducing shutter shock. It has done a great job on my 102MP Fuji 100S. Of course the only way to 100% eliminate shutter shock is with an electronic shutter. Without a stacked sensor (like the X-H2S, Sony A1, Nikon Z9 have) electronic shutters are slow in scanning and reduced DR, making them compromised with imaging defects often undesirable for still photos and also for video as you point out.
It's a known and well documented fact that Electronic first curtain produces rendering artifacts.
Here is an example.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-KnE1MEJ_2g
There are plenty of other documented examples.
EFC was a good idea but when it escaped into the wild - it was shown to have problems. All shutters where the total sensor is not exposed instantaneously can and will in certain situations produce artifacts. The solution is all the sensor be exposed instantaneously. On the mechanical side a in lens leaf shutter is the solution. On the electronic side a global electronic shutter is the solution.
The issue with in lens leaf shutters it makes lenses expensive which is why focal plane shutters were invented. For electronic shutters - well it would require an instantaneously read out of the sensor. Back in the day, MicroSoft developed and touted an OS the called NT. It did everything for everyone and eliminated the gross hackability of Windows. Promises, promises,..., it was so late and so bad NT became to be known as Not There. I never made it of course.
A global shutter is the Holy Grail of digital photography. Some very, very expensive military cameras have global shutters for a premium price. Some industrial security cameras have a global shutter but their size is pretty limited - not FF or APSC sizes. Not as expensive as the military versions but a heck of a lot more expensive than what the consumer would want to pay.
So the promise of global shutters to end the issues of mechanical shutters and electronic shutters and worse their half and half off-spring known as the EFC in consumer cameras is like the MicroSoft promise of a good robust OS, NT - Not There yet.
Truman, yes the pie in the sky Global Shutter has been talked about for years and years and is irrelevant today and for years to come. Leaf shutters have their own drawbacks.
In the here and now you do own an X-Pro3. One of the shutter options for that camera is "E-Front Curtain + Mechanical" where the mechanical shutter takes over at 1/2000 sec. That setting is meant to deal with both shutter shock and bokeh artifacts and inaccurate exposure of a pure electronic front curtain setting.
"E-Front Curtain + Mechanical": Shutter shock minimized, good bokeh and exposure accuracy maximized in this imperfect world of no Global Shutter.