AlwynS
Senior Member
Thanks Rodger!
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A case of great minds thinking alike? We will ignore the the second part of the saying....Thanks for the update. I had pretty much independently come to exactly the same settings as yours.Not really huge changes but hopefully some incremental improvements. I will be trying these settings for the next little while and report back how it works out for me in practice.
Not tried that yet...I also use max of ISO3200 for the BIF as I can quite easily take care of the noise at that level.
Thanks kindly David: this time of year they are certainly very common.Nice images. Your new settings certainly work in good light when the ISO doesn't need to be very high. Only wish I could experiment with obliging eagles and hummingbirds under glorious blue skies - very envious!!Went for a walk this morning and got the following:
BIF:
Long range:
Closer:
Closest:
The light was reasonably good, which certainly helped. But generally I would have expected the camera to have chosen around 1/1000th with lower ISO for most of these shots. Early days but this just "feels" as if I was able to get sharper images a bit more consistently and more easily.
Perched:
Not sure if anything really changed with this. At least to me it seems no worse than what I would have expected with the previous settings
So far so good I think.
Would love to see some examples of how you take care of the noise levels at 3200 ISO.Thanks for the update. I had pretty much independently come to exactly the same settings as yours. I also use max of ISO3200 for the BIF as I can quite easily take care of the noise at that level.Not really huge changes but hopefully some incremental improvements. I will be trying these settings for the next little while and report back how it works out for me in practice.
It turns out that 'soon' was even sooner than I expected…Please let me know when that happens.Yes, Sony has allowed Auto ISO in Manual mode for many years now. The original RX100 in 2012 didn't have it, but I think it came soon after. For example, the original RX10 (introduced in 2013) has it, as Elliott reported here:Food for thought indeed Alwyn, I going to try it. I knew about manual mode allowing auto ISO (most modern cameras do) but never thought to make use of it.
https://www.dpreview.com/forums/thread/3596601#forum-post-52772944
I'm sure the next DxO 30% sale will be along soon...Very dubious regards 3200 ISO for BIF, I will stick to 1600 for both perched and BIF but even 1600 is a stop more than I would normally allow the ISO to go up to on a 1" sensor camera. For me, it might be a case of biting the bullet and splashing out on DXO PL to get my hands on Deep Prime.
Thanks Nigel. Seems like the offer runs for 18 days so before committing I'll download the trial version and have a dabble! Problem is I haven't got any RX10iv bird images taken at 1600 iso let alone 3200 ISO to try it out on against Topaz DeNoise.It turns out that 'soon' was even sooner than I expected…Please let me know when that happens.Yes, Sony has allowed Auto ISO in Manual mode for many years now. The original RX100 in 2012 didn't have it, but I think it came soon after. For example, the original RX10 (introduced in 2013) has it, as Elliott reported here:Food for thought indeed Alwyn, I going to try it. I knew about manual mode allowing auto ISO (most modern cameras do) but never thought to make use of it.
https://www.dpreview.com/forums/thread/3596601#forum-post-52772944
I'm sure the next DxO 30% sale will be along soon...Very dubious regards 3200 ISO for BIF, I will stick to 1600 for both perched and BIF but even 1600 is a stop more than I would normally allow the ISO to go up to on a 1" sensor camera. For me, it might be a case of biting the bullet and splashing out on DXO PL to get my hands on Deep Prime.
https://shop.dxo.com/en
You need the Elite edition of PL4. I also find ViewPoint extremely useful, but I shoot much more wide angle images than you do, and that's where VP is most useful.
I don't use NIK, and it really has little relevance to the other DxO products. But Photoshop users may find its plug-ins handy.
I'm sure you can take some high ISO test images, with or without exotic avian content!Thanks Nigel. Seems like the offer runs for 18 days so before committing I'll download the trial version and have a dabble! Problem is I haven't got any RX10iv bird images taken at 1600 iso let alone 3200 ISO to try it out on against Topaz DeNoise.It turns out that 'soon' was even sooner than I expected…Please let me know when that happens.Yes, Sony has allowed Auto ISO in Manual mode for many years now. The original RX100 in 2012 didn't have it, but I think it came soon after. For example, the original RX10 (introduced in 2013) has it, as Elliott reported here:Food for thought indeed Alwyn, I going to try it. I knew about manual mode allowing auto ISO (most modern cameras do) but never thought to make use of it.
https://www.dpreview.com/forums/thread/3596601#forum-post-52772944
I'm sure the next DxO 30% sale will be along soon...Very dubious regards 3200 ISO for BIF, I will stick to 1600 for both perched and BIF but even 1600 is a stop more than I would normally allow the ISO to go up to on a 1" sensor camera. For me, it might be a case of biting the bullet and splashing out on DXO PL to get my hands on Deep Prime.
https://shop.dxo.com/en
You need the Elite edition of PL4. I also find ViewPoint extremely useful, but I shoot much more wide angle images than you do, and that's where VP is most useful.
I don't use NIK, and it really has little relevance to the other DxO products. But Photoshop users may find its plug-ins handy.
Which one?
I like the logic here. I don't have this camera, but I do have a used RX100-7 I bought.Or: When manual isn't
Some of you may recall that in the far distant past I created a thread on custom settings for the RX10 IV HERE . And for the past 2 years+ I have pretty much stuck with the latest revisions in that post.
Until today.
What drives one to make changes this far down the road you might ask? Well, in this case it started with a friend and fellow RX10 IV photographer sending me an e-mail with a question about shutter speed in the "Auto ISO" settings. In practice it gives SOME control but really not much: you can select a fixed shutter speed (not ideal) or Shutter speed slower, slow, normal or faster. But while helpful, those are really not very powerful or specific.
In the e-mail thread discussing this, my brother (a Panasonic FZ1000 user) asked but why not define both Aperture and shutter speed (which was what we were debating) and using Auto ISO. To which I responded: you can't! You can use Aperture mode (in which you control the aperture and lightly influence shutter speed with Auto ISO settings), you can use Shutter speed mode (in which you control the shutter speed and the rest is lightly influenced) or Manual, in which case case you have to fix everything because (as I thought), you cannot use Auto ISO because that is not a manual setting.
But that set me to thinking: is that REALLY the case? I checked... and no, that is NOT the case! It turns out that in Manual, you CAN use Auto ISO with upper and lower limits! Who'da thunk it? That was not what I was expecting in Manual hence I never even looked! Classic case of man with faulty parachute jump to conclusion....
So: now my BIF settings are stored in M1 as:
Manual mode
Shutter speed 1/2000th
F4
Auto ISO, lower limit 100, upper limit 3200 (this one will likely attract some comments)
Wide AF, continuous
Center metering (pretty much accepting that I almost invariably using some EC)
High burst rate
And my PERCHED BIRDS settings are stored in M2 as:
Manual mode
Shutter speed 1/1000th
F4
Auto ISO, lower limit 100, upper limit 1600
Small Flexible Spot AF, continuous
Spot metering
Medium burst rate
In both cases it it dead simple and almost instantaneous to change any of aperture (on the lens, duh!), shutter speed (with the control dial) and ISO (with the control wheel).
I have programmed these approximate settings to Custom Hold 1 and 2 as well. I normally walk around with the camera in the MR1 position (BIF) because these are the opportunities that tend to give you the least warning and opportunity to get the shot. As a consequence, Focus Hold 2 (Perched birds) is the Hold I use most often. Because that it the most commonly used I used to have my Perched bird Custom Hold setting programmed to the Focus Hold button on the lens as I thought that was the most convenient. However: I have recently come to the conclusion that I can better control the camera while pressing the AEL button while shooting rather than the Focus Hold button. So I have now mapped Custom Hold 2 (perched birds) to the AEL button and Custom Hold 1 (BIF) to the Focus Hold button.
Not really huge changes but hopefully some incremental improvements. I will be trying these settings for the next little while and report back how it works out for me in practice.