First time here, go easy on me.
So just noticed that whether i shoot a 720p or a 1080p footage with gopro, the bitrate is the same.
I get around 30Mbps bitrate when shooting 60fps on both resolutions and was curious if that's a recurring theme with sport cams.
Tested with Hero 4Black.
>>2972280
no 3 is kinda ridiculous.
>>2972280
What in Jesus' name is this and where can I see more of it?
>just asking for a friend
Womens beach rugby wat
>>2972280
[EXIF data available. Click here to show/hide.]
Camera-Specific Properties: Image-Specific Properties: Horizontal Resolution 72 dpi Vertical Resolution 72 dpi Color Space Information sRGB Image Width 720 Image Height 536 Scene Capture Type Standard
Bump, does it work the same way in DSLR?
>>2976240
The bit rates?
They can certainly vary quite a bunch more, but the "top" settings usually are also ~the same bit rates. Because technical bottlenecks related to bit rates make them the top settings.
>>2972280
Yeah, it works in a similar way to an extent with dlsrs.
The a6300, for example shoots 4k at 24fps or 30fps at 100mbps, or 24fps/30fps at 60mbps. So with the higher bit rate you can assume there is more information being recorded with the higher bit rate.
it shoots many other frame rates at HD or 720, which range from 24fps to 120 fps with bit rates ranging from 100mbs down to 6mbs. So theres alot more going on than just bit rates and frame rates, it also has to do with compression and file formats.
I dont know much about gopros, so i dont really know whats going on as far as formats and such. But I can promise you're getting 30mbps at all resolutions and frame rates, you'd be better off, quality wise, to shoot 1080 at 24fps