How to take photos in burst mode, without vibration?At what shutter speeds is mirror lock-up worthwhile?How to take photos of a solar eclipse without damaging one's eyes or camera?How can I take a clear picture of an object which is in relative motion opposite to my motion?EOS-1v not compatible with non EF, manual lenses?How to take Black and White photos without pure black?How can I avoid camera shake while using Canon 6D's Auto Exposure Bracketing?Did shooting in burst mode wear out my shutter?How to take sharper photosHow to take astrophotographs with terrestrial objects in frameHow can I achieve more clarity in my photos of the moon?How to take photos of planets with smartphone?

How to model explosives?

How much of data wrangling is a data scientist's job?

How do conventional missiles fly?

What does it mean to describe someone as a butt steak?

How to draw the figure with four pentagons?

How to take photos in burst mode, without vibration?

Is "remove commented out code" correct English?

Brothers & sisters

Can I use a neutral wire from another outlet to repair a broken neutral?

Why "Having chlorophyll without photosynthesis is actually very dangerous" and "like living with a bomb"?

Is there a hemisphere-neutral way of specifying a season?

Why is Collection not simply treated as Collection<?>

I Accidentally Deleted a Stock Terminal Theme

How can saying a song's name be a copyright violation?

Why is it a bad idea to hire a hitman to eliminate most corrupt politicians?

Doing something right before you need it - expression for this?

90's TV series where a boy goes to another dimension through portal near power lines

Were any external disk drives stacked vertically?

Anagram holiday

Is it unprofessional to ask if a job posting on GlassDoor is real?

1960's book about a plague that kills all white people

What killed these X2 caps?

Infinite Abelian subgroup of infinite non Abelian group example

What is the intuition behind short exact sequences of groups; in particular, what is the intuition behind group extensions?



How to take photos in burst mode, without vibration?


At what shutter speeds is mirror lock-up worthwhile?How to take photos of a solar eclipse without damaging one's eyes or camera?How can I take a clear picture of an object which is in relative motion opposite to my motion?EOS-1v not compatible with non EF, manual lenses?How to take Black and White photos without pure black?How can I avoid camera shake while using Canon 6D's Auto Exposure Bracketing?Did shooting in burst mode wear out my shutter?How to take sharper photosHow to take astrophotographs with terrestrial objects in frameHow can I achieve more clarity in my photos of the moon?How to take photos of planets with smartphone?






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








2















I have a Canon EOS 1200D (Rebel T5) and a reflector telescope, and I want to take some photos of Jupiter with them.



If I use burst mode, camera starts moving its mechanical parts: the mirror, or the shutter, or both. I don't know exactly.



This produce a lot of vibrations on the telescope, thus making motion blur.



Even if I lock the mirror up, and display image on the screen, when I press the shutter button, it stats moving some mechanical parts and producing vibrations.



How can I avoid that? Is there a way to prevent any movement of mechanical parts to take a burst?










share|improve this question







New contributor




vsis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 1





    What shutter speeds are you using?

    – Hueco
    8 hours ago











  • Assuming your camera features Live View shooting, look for Silent LV Mode in the menu. Take a look at this question that I asked a little while ago about a pretty similar behavior on my Canon 80D. In particular, look at the discussion in the comments between bogl and me. This might help with your issue. Although I'm not using burst mode, so I don't know if this will resolve it for you.

    – Gern Blanston
    8 hours ago











  • I don't think the xx00D models have 'Silent LV' mode. I could be woefully out of date, though, as I haven't looked at one in years.

    – Michael C
    7 hours ago

















2















I have a Canon EOS 1200D (Rebel T5) and a reflector telescope, and I want to take some photos of Jupiter with them.



If I use burst mode, camera starts moving its mechanical parts: the mirror, or the shutter, or both. I don't know exactly.



This produce a lot of vibrations on the telescope, thus making motion blur.



Even if I lock the mirror up, and display image on the screen, when I press the shutter button, it stats moving some mechanical parts and producing vibrations.



How can I avoid that? Is there a way to prevent any movement of mechanical parts to take a burst?










share|improve this question







New contributor




vsis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 1





    What shutter speeds are you using?

    – Hueco
    8 hours ago











  • Assuming your camera features Live View shooting, look for Silent LV Mode in the menu. Take a look at this question that I asked a little while ago about a pretty similar behavior on my Canon 80D. In particular, look at the discussion in the comments between bogl and me. This might help with your issue. Although I'm not using burst mode, so I don't know if this will resolve it for you.

    – Gern Blanston
    8 hours ago











  • I don't think the xx00D models have 'Silent LV' mode. I could be woefully out of date, though, as I haven't looked at one in years.

    – Michael C
    7 hours ago













2












2








2








I have a Canon EOS 1200D (Rebel T5) and a reflector telescope, and I want to take some photos of Jupiter with them.



If I use burst mode, camera starts moving its mechanical parts: the mirror, or the shutter, or both. I don't know exactly.



This produce a lot of vibrations on the telescope, thus making motion blur.



Even if I lock the mirror up, and display image on the screen, when I press the shutter button, it stats moving some mechanical parts and producing vibrations.



How can I avoid that? Is there a way to prevent any movement of mechanical parts to take a burst?










share|improve this question







New contributor




vsis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I have a Canon EOS 1200D (Rebel T5) and a reflector telescope, and I want to take some photos of Jupiter with them.



If I use burst mode, camera starts moving its mechanical parts: the mirror, or the shutter, or both. I don't know exactly.



This produce a lot of vibrations on the telescope, thus making motion blur.



Even if I lock the mirror up, and display image on the screen, when I press the shutter button, it stats moving some mechanical parts and producing vibrations.



How can I avoid that? Is there a way to prevent any movement of mechanical parts to take a burst?







canon astrophotography motion-blur






share|improve this question







New contributor




vsis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







New contributor




vsis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question






New contributor




vsis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 9 hours ago









vsisvsis

133




133




New contributor




vsis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





vsis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






vsis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 1





    What shutter speeds are you using?

    – Hueco
    8 hours ago











  • Assuming your camera features Live View shooting, look for Silent LV Mode in the menu. Take a look at this question that I asked a little while ago about a pretty similar behavior on my Canon 80D. In particular, look at the discussion in the comments between bogl and me. This might help with your issue. Although I'm not using burst mode, so I don't know if this will resolve it for you.

    – Gern Blanston
    8 hours ago











  • I don't think the xx00D models have 'Silent LV' mode. I could be woefully out of date, though, as I haven't looked at one in years.

    – Michael C
    7 hours ago












  • 1





    What shutter speeds are you using?

    – Hueco
    8 hours ago











  • Assuming your camera features Live View shooting, look for Silent LV Mode in the menu. Take a look at this question that I asked a little while ago about a pretty similar behavior on my Canon 80D. In particular, look at the discussion in the comments between bogl and me. This might help with your issue. Although I'm not using burst mode, so I don't know if this will resolve it for you.

    – Gern Blanston
    8 hours ago











  • I don't think the xx00D models have 'Silent LV' mode. I could be woefully out of date, though, as I haven't looked at one in years.

    – Michael C
    7 hours ago







1




1





What shutter speeds are you using?

– Hueco
8 hours ago





What shutter speeds are you using?

– Hueco
8 hours ago













Assuming your camera features Live View shooting, look for Silent LV Mode in the menu. Take a look at this question that I asked a little while ago about a pretty similar behavior on my Canon 80D. In particular, look at the discussion in the comments between bogl and me. This might help with your issue. Although I'm not using burst mode, so I don't know if this will resolve it for you.

– Gern Blanston
8 hours ago





Assuming your camera features Live View shooting, look for Silent LV Mode in the menu. Take a look at this question that I asked a little while ago about a pretty similar behavior on my Canon 80D. In particular, look at the discussion in the comments between bogl and me. This might help with your issue. Although I'm not using burst mode, so I don't know if this will resolve it for you.

– Gern Blanston
8 hours ago













I don't think the xx00D models have 'Silent LV' mode. I could be woefully out of date, though, as I haven't looked at one in years.

– Michael C
7 hours ago





I don't think the xx00D models have 'Silent LV' mode. I could be woefully out of date, though, as I haven't looked at one in years.

– Michael C
7 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















5














In theory, live view mode should ensure the mirror doesn't flip, if you don't use quick mode autofocus.



In practice, though, your camera is a very cheap one, that has probably an integrated shutter/mirror motor, so I assume the mirror actuates the same time the shutter actuates. So, if you use a burst, unfortunately the mirror probably actuates between images in the burst.



Sorry I don't have a source stating the integration of shutter/mirror motor for this particular camera, but at least https://www.lmscope.com/en/Digitalkamera_Vibrationen_en.html says about cheap cameras:




Lower priced SLR cameras generally do not have separate motors that drive the mirror and the shutter. If the shutter is operated in Live View mode, the mirror flips down and then up again. All this flipping shakes the camera and thus causes (sometimes significant) vibrations that may seriously compromise the image quality. To reduce the impact of mirror slap, most models come equipped with a special function called mirror lock-up (mirror pre-release). When the mirror lock-up function is enabled, the mirror is flipped up well before the shutter opens (a time interval between 2 and 8 seconds can be selected). This short pause allows the mirror-induced mechanical vibrations to die down before exposing the film so that they do not affect the image quality.





share|improve this answer























  • Oh, I forgot to mention that. Yes, the mirror moves between photos in burst mode. I've found nothing in the menu/settings to prevent that. Probably you're right about the motor.

    – vsis
    7 hours ago












  • @vsis Does the mirror cycle between frames even when in Live view (and with AF turned off)?

    – Michael C
    7 hours ago











  • @juhist If the camera is capable of mirror lockup, then it needs separate motors for mirror and shutter. The same is true of any electronically controlled shutter. Your quote is more applicable to many low end film era SLRs than digital bodies. To the best of my knowledge, none of the major manufacturer carried that over into low end digital. Nikon did continue to use the same motor to actuate the mirror and stop down the aperture with the D40 → D3x00 series. But even those models have separate motors for the electronically controlled focal plane shutters.

    – Michael C
    7 hours ago











  • @MichaelC, Yes. It does it in live view, and no autofocus. I use manual mode to take photos with the telescope.

    – vsis
    6 hours ago











  • >Applicable models: all EOS DSLR cameras except for 1000D, 1100D, 1200D, 1300D. eos-magazine.com/articles/EOS_feature/camera-mirror-lockup.html @juhist , you were right. This camera can't lock the mirror. So, it's impossible to take a burst without vibrations.

    – vsis
    3 hours ago


















5















If I use burst mode, camera starts moving its mechanical parts: the mirror, or the shutter, or both. I don't know exactly.




Typically, the order of operations is: mirror flips, shutter opens. This is regardless of shooting mode. Using Live View or Mirror Lock-Up changes the rules a bit and takes the mirror flip out of the equation, but the shutter is still there.




Even if I lock the mirror up, and display image on the screen, when I press the shutter button, it stats moving some mechanical parts and producing vibrations.




This is the shutter. If you want to have the absolute minimum amount of vibration, you need to:



  • Use single shot mode

  • Use Mirror Lock Up

  • Have a rock solid tripod

  • Use a remote shutter release

  • Hit the shutter release for the mirror to flip and wait a few seconds

  • Release the shutter to take the shot

If this single pass of the shutter opening and closing is causing you to have camera shake, then you may want to look into a different camera, one that has an electronic shutter instead of a mechanical one.






share|improve this answer

























  • Well, currently I'm using single shot mode and shutter timer, until I have a remote shutter control. So I don't have motion blur in that way, although it takes its time to take, for example, 500 photos of Jupiter. Because of that, it would be nice to have more photos in less time, without compromising quality.

    – vsis
    7 hours ago











  • @Hueco That's what you get for buying superb analog gear! ;)

    – flolilo
    7 hours ago











  • @vsis Forgive me the question, but why do you need 500 pictures of Jupiter? I would take 1, perhaps two, then check them, and if they are good enough, I would stop (at least until Jupiter and/or its atmosphere had sufficient time to move around a bit). To me, making 500 (or even 20, for that matter) roughly identical shots of some (roughly) inanimate object seems like overkill in post-production.

    – flolilo
    7 hours ago











  • @flolilo DR is very much an issue in astrophotography if one wants to preserve the different colors of different stars.

    – Michael C
    7 hours ago






  • 1





    @vsis ah, your question wasn't clear to me before. So, you are needing to take how many images within what sort of timeframe?

    – Hueco
    6 hours ago











Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "61"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);






vsis is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fphoto.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f106363%2fhow-to-take-photos-in-burst-mode-without-vibration%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









5














In theory, live view mode should ensure the mirror doesn't flip, if you don't use quick mode autofocus.



In practice, though, your camera is a very cheap one, that has probably an integrated shutter/mirror motor, so I assume the mirror actuates the same time the shutter actuates. So, if you use a burst, unfortunately the mirror probably actuates between images in the burst.



Sorry I don't have a source stating the integration of shutter/mirror motor for this particular camera, but at least https://www.lmscope.com/en/Digitalkamera_Vibrationen_en.html says about cheap cameras:




Lower priced SLR cameras generally do not have separate motors that drive the mirror and the shutter. If the shutter is operated in Live View mode, the mirror flips down and then up again. All this flipping shakes the camera and thus causes (sometimes significant) vibrations that may seriously compromise the image quality. To reduce the impact of mirror slap, most models come equipped with a special function called mirror lock-up (mirror pre-release). When the mirror lock-up function is enabled, the mirror is flipped up well before the shutter opens (a time interval between 2 and 8 seconds can be selected). This short pause allows the mirror-induced mechanical vibrations to die down before exposing the film so that they do not affect the image quality.





share|improve this answer























  • Oh, I forgot to mention that. Yes, the mirror moves between photos in burst mode. I've found nothing in the menu/settings to prevent that. Probably you're right about the motor.

    – vsis
    7 hours ago












  • @vsis Does the mirror cycle between frames even when in Live view (and with AF turned off)?

    – Michael C
    7 hours ago











  • @juhist If the camera is capable of mirror lockup, then it needs separate motors for mirror and shutter. The same is true of any electronically controlled shutter. Your quote is more applicable to many low end film era SLRs than digital bodies. To the best of my knowledge, none of the major manufacturer carried that over into low end digital. Nikon did continue to use the same motor to actuate the mirror and stop down the aperture with the D40 → D3x00 series. But even those models have separate motors for the electronically controlled focal plane shutters.

    – Michael C
    7 hours ago











  • @MichaelC, Yes. It does it in live view, and no autofocus. I use manual mode to take photos with the telescope.

    – vsis
    6 hours ago











  • >Applicable models: all EOS DSLR cameras except for 1000D, 1100D, 1200D, 1300D. eos-magazine.com/articles/EOS_feature/camera-mirror-lockup.html @juhist , you were right. This camera can't lock the mirror. So, it's impossible to take a burst without vibrations.

    – vsis
    3 hours ago















5














In theory, live view mode should ensure the mirror doesn't flip, if you don't use quick mode autofocus.



In practice, though, your camera is a very cheap one, that has probably an integrated shutter/mirror motor, so I assume the mirror actuates the same time the shutter actuates. So, if you use a burst, unfortunately the mirror probably actuates between images in the burst.



Sorry I don't have a source stating the integration of shutter/mirror motor for this particular camera, but at least https://www.lmscope.com/en/Digitalkamera_Vibrationen_en.html says about cheap cameras:




Lower priced SLR cameras generally do not have separate motors that drive the mirror and the shutter. If the shutter is operated in Live View mode, the mirror flips down and then up again. All this flipping shakes the camera and thus causes (sometimes significant) vibrations that may seriously compromise the image quality. To reduce the impact of mirror slap, most models come equipped with a special function called mirror lock-up (mirror pre-release). When the mirror lock-up function is enabled, the mirror is flipped up well before the shutter opens (a time interval between 2 and 8 seconds can be selected). This short pause allows the mirror-induced mechanical vibrations to die down before exposing the film so that they do not affect the image quality.





share|improve this answer























  • Oh, I forgot to mention that. Yes, the mirror moves between photos in burst mode. I've found nothing in the menu/settings to prevent that. Probably you're right about the motor.

    – vsis
    7 hours ago












  • @vsis Does the mirror cycle between frames even when in Live view (and with AF turned off)?

    – Michael C
    7 hours ago











  • @juhist If the camera is capable of mirror lockup, then it needs separate motors for mirror and shutter. The same is true of any electronically controlled shutter. Your quote is more applicable to many low end film era SLRs than digital bodies. To the best of my knowledge, none of the major manufacturer carried that over into low end digital. Nikon did continue to use the same motor to actuate the mirror and stop down the aperture with the D40 → D3x00 series. But even those models have separate motors for the electronically controlled focal plane shutters.

    – Michael C
    7 hours ago











  • @MichaelC, Yes. It does it in live view, and no autofocus. I use manual mode to take photos with the telescope.

    – vsis
    6 hours ago











  • >Applicable models: all EOS DSLR cameras except for 1000D, 1100D, 1200D, 1300D. eos-magazine.com/articles/EOS_feature/camera-mirror-lockup.html @juhist , you were right. This camera can't lock the mirror. So, it's impossible to take a burst without vibrations.

    – vsis
    3 hours ago













5












5








5







In theory, live view mode should ensure the mirror doesn't flip, if you don't use quick mode autofocus.



In practice, though, your camera is a very cheap one, that has probably an integrated shutter/mirror motor, so I assume the mirror actuates the same time the shutter actuates. So, if you use a burst, unfortunately the mirror probably actuates between images in the burst.



Sorry I don't have a source stating the integration of shutter/mirror motor for this particular camera, but at least https://www.lmscope.com/en/Digitalkamera_Vibrationen_en.html says about cheap cameras:




Lower priced SLR cameras generally do not have separate motors that drive the mirror and the shutter. If the shutter is operated in Live View mode, the mirror flips down and then up again. All this flipping shakes the camera and thus causes (sometimes significant) vibrations that may seriously compromise the image quality. To reduce the impact of mirror slap, most models come equipped with a special function called mirror lock-up (mirror pre-release). When the mirror lock-up function is enabled, the mirror is flipped up well before the shutter opens (a time interval between 2 and 8 seconds can be selected). This short pause allows the mirror-induced mechanical vibrations to die down before exposing the film so that they do not affect the image quality.





share|improve this answer













In theory, live view mode should ensure the mirror doesn't flip, if you don't use quick mode autofocus.



In practice, though, your camera is a very cheap one, that has probably an integrated shutter/mirror motor, so I assume the mirror actuates the same time the shutter actuates. So, if you use a burst, unfortunately the mirror probably actuates between images in the burst.



Sorry I don't have a source stating the integration of shutter/mirror motor for this particular camera, but at least https://www.lmscope.com/en/Digitalkamera_Vibrationen_en.html says about cheap cameras:




Lower priced SLR cameras generally do not have separate motors that drive the mirror and the shutter. If the shutter is operated in Live View mode, the mirror flips down and then up again. All this flipping shakes the camera and thus causes (sometimes significant) vibrations that may seriously compromise the image quality. To reduce the impact of mirror slap, most models come equipped with a special function called mirror lock-up (mirror pre-release). When the mirror lock-up function is enabled, the mirror is flipped up well before the shutter opens (a time interval between 2 and 8 seconds can be selected). This short pause allows the mirror-induced mechanical vibrations to die down before exposing the film so that they do not affect the image quality.






share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 7 hours ago









juhistjuhist

785113




785113












  • Oh, I forgot to mention that. Yes, the mirror moves between photos in burst mode. I've found nothing in the menu/settings to prevent that. Probably you're right about the motor.

    – vsis
    7 hours ago












  • @vsis Does the mirror cycle between frames even when in Live view (and with AF turned off)?

    – Michael C
    7 hours ago











  • @juhist If the camera is capable of mirror lockup, then it needs separate motors for mirror and shutter. The same is true of any electronically controlled shutter. Your quote is more applicable to many low end film era SLRs than digital bodies. To the best of my knowledge, none of the major manufacturer carried that over into low end digital. Nikon did continue to use the same motor to actuate the mirror and stop down the aperture with the D40 → D3x00 series. But even those models have separate motors for the electronically controlled focal plane shutters.

    – Michael C
    7 hours ago











  • @MichaelC, Yes. It does it in live view, and no autofocus. I use manual mode to take photos with the telescope.

    – vsis
    6 hours ago











  • >Applicable models: all EOS DSLR cameras except for 1000D, 1100D, 1200D, 1300D. eos-magazine.com/articles/EOS_feature/camera-mirror-lockup.html @juhist , you were right. This camera can't lock the mirror. So, it's impossible to take a burst without vibrations.

    – vsis
    3 hours ago

















  • Oh, I forgot to mention that. Yes, the mirror moves between photos in burst mode. I've found nothing in the menu/settings to prevent that. Probably you're right about the motor.

    – vsis
    7 hours ago












  • @vsis Does the mirror cycle between frames even when in Live view (and with AF turned off)?

    – Michael C
    7 hours ago











  • @juhist If the camera is capable of mirror lockup, then it needs separate motors for mirror and shutter. The same is true of any electronically controlled shutter. Your quote is more applicable to many low end film era SLRs than digital bodies. To the best of my knowledge, none of the major manufacturer carried that over into low end digital. Nikon did continue to use the same motor to actuate the mirror and stop down the aperture with the D40 → D3x00 series. But even those models have separate motors for the electronically controlled focal plane shutters.

    – Michael C
    7 hours ago











  • @MichaelC, Yes. It does it in live view, and no autofocus. I use manual mode to take photos with the telescope.

    – vsis
    6 hours ago











  • >Applicable models: all EOS DSLR cameras except for 1000D, 1100D, 1200D, 1300D. eos-magazine.com/articles/EOS_feature/camera-mirror-lockup.html @juhist , you were right. This camera can't lock the mirror. So, it's impossible to take a burst without vibrations.

    – vsis
    3 hours ago
















Oh, I forgot to mention that. Yes, the mirror moves between photos in burst mode. I've found nothing in the menu/settings to prevent that. Probably you're right about the motor.

– vsis
7 hours ago






Oh, I forgot to mention that. Yes, the mirror moves between photos in burst mode. I've found nothing in the menu/settings to prevent that. Probably you're right about the motor.

– vsis
7 hours ago














@vsis Does the mirror cycle between frames even when in Live view (and with AF turned off)?

– Michael C
7 hours ago





@vsis Does the mirror cycle between frames even when in Live view (and with AF turned off)?

– Michael C
7 hours ago













@juhist If the camera is capable of mirror lockup, then it needs separate motors for mirror and shutter. The same is true of any electronically controlled shutter. Your quote is more applicable to many low end film era SLRs than digital bodies. To the best of my knowledge, none of the major manufacturer carried that over into low end digital. Nikon did continue to use the same motor to actuate the mirror and stop down the aperture with the D40 → D3x00 series. But even those models have separate motors for the electronically controlled focal plane shutters.

– Michael C
7 hours ago





@juhist If the camera is capable of mirror lockup, then it needs separate motors for mirror and shutter. The same is true of any electronically controlled shutter. Your quote is more applicable to many low end film era SLRs than digital bodies. To the best of my knowledge, none of the major manufacturer carried that over into low end digital. Nikon did continue to use the same motor to actuate the mirror and stop down the aperture with the D40 → D3x00 series. But even those models have separate motors for the electronically controlled focal plane shutters.

– Michael C
7 hours ago













@MichaelC, Yes. It does it in live view, and no autofocus. I use manual mode to take photos with the telescope.

– vsis
6 hours ago





@MichaelC, Yes. It does it in live view, and no autofocus. I use manual mode to take photos with the telescope.

– vsis
6 hours ago













>Applicable models: all EOS DSLR cameras except for 1000D, 1100D, 1200D, 1300D. eos-magazine.com/articles/EOS_feature/camera-mirror-lockup.html @juhist , you were right. This camera can't lock the mirror. So, it's impossible to take a burst without vibrations.

– vsis
3 hours ago





>Applicable models: all EOS DSLR cameras except for 1000D, 1100D, 1200D, 1300D. eos-magazine.com/articles/EOS_feature/camera-mirror-lockup.html @juhist , you were right. This camera can't lock the mirror. So, it's impossible to take a burst without vibrations.

– vsis
3 hours ago













5















If I use burst mode, camera starts moving its mechanical parts: the mirror, or the shutter, or both. I don't know exactly.




Typically, the order of operations is: mirror flips, shutter opens. This is regardless of shooting mode. Using Live View or Mirror Lock-Up changes the rules a bit and takes the mirror flip out of the equation, but the shutter is still there.




Even if I lock the mirror up, and display image on the screen, when I press the shutter button, it stats moving some mechanical parts and producing vibrations.




This is the shutter. If you want to have the absolute minimum amount of vibration, you need to:



  • Use single shot mode

  • Use Mirror Lock Up

  • Have a rock solid tripod

  • Use a remote shutter release

  • Hit the shutter release for the mirror to flip and wait a few seconds

  • Release the shutter to take the shot

If this single pass of the shutter opening and closing is causing you to have camera shake, then you may want to look into a different camera, one that has an electronic shutter instead of a mechanical one.






share|improve this answer

























  • Well, currently I'm using single shot mode and shutter timer, until I have a remote shutter control. So I don't have motion blur in that way, although it takes its time to take, for example, 500 photos of Jupiter. Because of that, it would be nice to have more photos in less time, without compromising quality.

    – vsis
    7 hours ago











  • @Hueco That's what you get for buying superb analog gear! ;)

    – flolilo
    7 hours ago











  • @vsis Forgive me the question, but why do you need 500 pictures of Jupiter? I would take 1, perhaps two, then check them, and if they are good enough, I would stop (at least until Jupiter and/or its atmosphere had sufficient time to move around a bit). To me, making 500 (or even 20, for that matter) roughly identical shots of some (roughly) inanimate object seems like overkill in post-production.

    – flolilo
    7 hours ago











  • @flolilo DR is very much an issue in astrophotography if one wants to preserve the different colors of different stars.

    – Michael C
    7 hours ago






  • 1





    @vsis ah, your question wasn't clear to me before. So, you are needing to take how many images within what sort of timeframe?

    – Hueco
    6 hours ago















5















If I use burst mode, camera starts moving its mechanical parts: the mirror, or the shutter, or both. I don't know exactly.




Typically, the order of operations is: mirror flips, shutter opens. This is regardless of shooting mode. Using Live View or Mirror Lock-Up changes the rules a bit and takes the mirror flip out of the equation, but the shutter is still there.




Even if I lock the mirror up, and display image on the screen, when I press the shutter button, it stats moving some mechanical parts and producing vibrations.




This is the shutter. If you want to have the absolute minimum amount of vibration, you need to:



  • Use single shot mode

  • Use Mirror Lock Up

  • Have a rock solid tripod

  • Use a remote shutter release

  • Hit the shutter release for the mirror to flip and wait a few seconds

  • Release the shutter to take the shot

If this single pass of the shutter opening and closing is causing you to have camera shake, then you may want to look into a different camera, one that has an electronic shutter instead of a mechanical one.






share|improve this answer

























  • Well, currently I'm using single shot mode and shutter timer, until I have a remote shutter control. So I don't have motion blur in that way, although it takes its time to take, for example, 500 photos of Jupiter. Because of that, it would be nice to have more photos in less time, without compromising quality.

    – vsis
    7 hours ago











  • @Hueco That's what you get for buying superb analog gear! ;)

    – flolilo
    7 hours ago











  • @vsis Forgive me the question, but why do you need 500 pictures of Jupiter? I would take 1, perhaps two, then check them, and if they are good enough, I would stop (at least until Jupiter and/or its atmosphere had sufficient time to move around a bit). To me, making 500 (or even 20, for that matter) roughly identical shots of some (roughly) inanimate object seems like overkill in post-production.

    – flolilo
    7 hours ago











  • @flolilo DR is very much an issue in astrophotography if one wants to preserve the different colors of different stars.

    – Michael C
    7 hours ago






  • 1





    @vsis ah, your question wasn't clear to me before. So, you are needing to take how many images within what sort of timeframe?

    – Hueco
    6 hours ago













5












5








5








If I use burst mode, camera starts moving its mechanical parts: the mirror, or the shutter, or both. I don't know exactly.




Typically, the order of operations is: mirror flips, shutter opens. This is regardless of shooting mode. Using Live View or Mirror Lock-Up changes the rules a bit and takes the mirror flip out of the equation, but the shutter is still there.




Even if I lock the mirror up, and display image on the screen, when I press the shutter button, it stats moving some mechanical parts and producing vibrations.




This is the shutter. If you want to have the absolute minimum amount of vibration, you need to:



  • Use single shot mode

  • Use Mirror Lock Up

  • Have a rock solid tripod

  • Use a remote shutter release

  • Hit the shutter release for the mirror to flip and wait a few seconds

  • Release the shutter to take the shot

If this single pass of the shutter opening and closing is causing you to have camera shake, then you may want to look into a different camera, one that has an electronic shutter instead of a mechanical one.






share|improve this answer
















If I use burst mode, camera starts moving its mechanical parts: the mirror, or the shutter, or both. I don't know exactly.




Typically, the order of operations is: mirror flips, shutter opens. This is regardless of shooting mode. Using Live View or Mirror Lock-Up changes the rules a bit and takes the mirror flip out of the equation, but the shutter is still there.




Even if I lock the mirror up, and display image on the screen, when I press the shutter button, it stats moving some mechanical parts and producing vibrations.




This is the shutter. If you want to have the absolute minimum amount of vibration, you need to:



  • Use single shot mode

  • Use Mirror Lock Up

  • Have a rock solid tripod

  • Use a remote shutter release

  • Hit the shutter release for the mirror to flip and wait a few seconds

  • Release the shutter to take the shot

If this single pass of the shutter opening and closing is causing you to have camera shake, then you may want to look into a different camera, one that has an electronic shutter instead of a mechanical one.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 7 hours ago

























answered 8 hours ago









HuecoHueco

12k32857




12k32857












  • Well, currently I'm using single shot mode and shutter timer, until I have a remote shutter control. So I don't have motion blur in that way, although it takes its time to take, for example, 500 photos of Jupiter. Because of that, it would be nice to have more photos in less time, without compromising quality.

    – vsis
    7 hours ago











  • @Hueco That's what you get for buying superb analog gear! ;)

    – flolilo
    7 hours ago











  • @vsis Forgive me the question, but why do you need 500 pictures of Jupiter? I would take 1, perhaps two, then check them, and if they are good enough, I would stop (at least until Jupiter and/or its atmosphere had sufficient time to move around a bit). To me, making 500 (or even 20, for that matter) roughly identical shots of some (roughly) inanimate object seems like overkill in post-production.

    – flolilo
    7 hours ago











  • @flolilo DR is very much an issue in astrophotography if one wants to preserve the different colors of different stars.

    – Michael C
    7 hours ago






  • 1





    @vsis ah, your question wasn't clear to me before. So, you are needing to take how many images within what sort of timeframe?

    – Hueco
    6 hours ago

















  • Well, currently I'm using single shot mode and shutter timer, until I have a remote shutter control. So I don't have motion blur in that way, although it takes its time to take, for example, 500 photos of Jupiter. Because of that, it would be nice to have more photos in less time, without compromising quality.

    – vsis
    7 hours ago











  • @Hueco That's what you get for buying superb analog gear! ;)

    – flolilo
    7 hours ago











  • @vsis Forgive me the question, but why do you need 500 pictures of Jupiter? I would take 1, perhaps two, then check them, and if they are good enough, I would stop (at least until Jupiter and/or its atmosphere had sufficient time to move around a bit). To me, making 500 (or even 20, for that matter) roughly identical shots of some (roughly) inanimate object seems like overkill in post-production.

    – flolilo
    7 hours ago











  • @flolilo DR is very much an issue in astrophotography if one wants to preserve the different colors of different stars.

    – Michael C
    7 hours ago






  • 1





    @vsis ah, your question wasn't clear to me before. So, you are needing to take how many images within what sort of timeframe?

    – Hueco
    6 hours ago
















Well, currently I'm using single shot mode and shutter timer, until I have a remote shutter control. So I don't have motion blur in that way, although it takes its time to take, for example, 500 photos of Jupiter. Because of that, it would be nice to have more photos in less time, without compromising quality.

– vsis
7 hours ago





Well, currently I'm using single shot mode and shutter timer, until I have a remote shutter control. So I don't have motion blur in that way, although it takes its time to take, for example, 500 photos of Jupiter. Because of that, it would be nice to have more photos in less time, without compromising quality.

– vsis
7 hours ago













@Hueco That's what you get for buying superb analog gear! ;)

– flolilo
7 hours ago





@Hueco That's what you get for buying superb analog gear! ;)

– flolilo
7 hours ago













@vsis Forgive me the question, but why do you need 500 pictures of Jupiter? I would take 1, perhaps two, then check them, and if they are good enough, I would stop (at least until Jupiter and/or its atmosphere had sufficient time to move around a bit). To me, making 500 (or even 20, for that matter) roughly identical shots of some (roughly) inanimate object seems like overkill in post-production.

– flolilo
7 hours ago





@vsis Forgive me the question, but why do you need 500 pictures of Jupiter? I would take 1, perhaps two, then check them, and if they are good enough, I would stop (at least until Jupiter and/or its atmosphere had sufficient time to move around a bit). To me, making 500 (or even 20, for that matter) roughly identical shots of some (roughly) inanimate object seems like overkill in post-production.

– flolilo
7 hours ago













@flolilo DR is very much an issue in astrophotography if one wants to preserve the different colors of different stars.

– Michael C
7 hours ago





@flolilo DR is very much an issue in astrophotography if one wants to preserve the different colors of different stars.

– Michael C
7 hours ago




1




1





@vsis ah, your question wasn't clear to me before. So, you are needing to take how many images within what sort of timeframe?

– Hueco
6 hours ago





@vsis ah, your question wasn't clear to me before. So, you are needing to take how many images within what sort of timeframe?

– Hueco
6 hours ago










vsis is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









draft saved

draft discarded


















vsis is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












vsis is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.











vsis is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.














Thanks for contributing an answer to Photography Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fphoto.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f106363%2fhow-to-take-photos-in-burst-mode-without-vibration%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Can not update quote_id field of “quote_item” table magento 2Magento 2.1 - We can't remove the item. (Shopping Cart doesnt allow us to remove items before becomes empty)Add value for custom quote item attribute using REST apiREST API endpoint v1/carts/cartId/items always returns error messageCorrect way to save entries to databaseHow to remove all associated quote objects of a customer completelyMagento 2 - Save value from custom input field to quote_itemGet quote_item data using quote id and product id filter in Magento 2How to set additional data to quote_item table from controller in Magento 2?What is the purpose of additional_data column in quote_item table in magento2Set Custom Price to Quote item magento2 from controller

How to solve knockout JS error in Magento 2 Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern) Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?(Magento2) knockout.js:3012 Uncaught ReferenceError: Unable to process bindingUnable to process binding Knockout.js magento 2Cannot read property `scopeLabel` of undefined on Product Detail PageCan't get Customer Data on frontend in Magento 2Magento2 Order Summary - unable to process bindingKO templates are not loading in Magento 2.1 applicationgetting knockout js error magento 2Product grid not load -— Unable to process binding Knockout.js magento 2Product form not loaded in magento2Uncaught ReferenceError: Unable to process binding “if: function()return (isShowLegend()) ” magento 2

Nissan Patrol Зміст Перше покоління — 4W60 (1951-1960) | Друге покоління — 60 series (1960-1980) | Третє покоління (1980–2002) | Четверте покоління — Y60 (1987–1998) | П'яте покоління — Y61 (1997–2013) | Шосте покоління — Y62 (2010- ) | Посилання | Зноски | Навігаційне менюОфіційний український сайтТест-драйв Nissan Patrol 2010 7-го поколінняNissan PatrolКак мы тестировали Nissan Patrol 2016рвиправивши або дописавши її