Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Been experimenting with panoramas with the built in panorama function on the Drive dial of my X-T5. I'm surprised how fussy the camera is about how fast I pan. So far I haven't found any reference that specifies the panning speed range that works. I've searched the manual, the Tony Phillips book, and this forum.

I get errors on some shots for going too fast, and other shots for going too slow. I actually have difficulty hitting a speed between these two limits and sometimes the error message isn't the one I would guess.

I do have a turntable with preset speeds and have tried placing the camera on it to take a panorama with an accurate steady speed. The highest speed available is 25.03 seconds per rotation, which works, and 31.95 seconds per rotation works, but 36.13 seconds per rotation gives an error for being too slow. These experiments were with a Fuji 14 mm f/2.8 lens, ISO 640, f/5.6, 1/60 s. Camera is horizontal, set for horizontal left-to-right scan, turntable sweeping camera left-to-right. I haven't yet tried other lenses to see how focal length matters; the manual says it should be 35 mm or less.

I'd like to take more panoramas but apparently need a motorized panning head with a speed that is compatible with the camera's needs. However, I don't know what the camera's needs are, at least not very precisely for different lenses (which I could continue experimenting to find). Moreover, the motorized panning head options I've looked at so far don't even state the available speed settings.

What panning speeds does the camera work with, and how does lens focal length affect these?

What motorized heads work with the camera?

Or -- is the built in Panorama mode not worth trying to make work, and should I instead use external software to stitch stills together?

 

Thank you!

Link to post
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...

As BobJ notes, it probvably easier and better to stich multiple shots when you process the photos.

Lightroom is easy and provides very good results. I'm sure there are other photo editors that can do it too.

You'll get a bigger and better file from stitching multiple raw files.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Similar Content

  • Posts

    • Hey everyone, I am new to the fujifilm system, and I just received my X100vi about 15 days ago, and yesterday I noticed that ISO and exposure dials are acting up. I spent hours watching YouTube videos and reading forms without finding any solutions. Using ChatGPT or Gemini also didn’t help. My issues are the following: If I want to set my ISO at a specific value then the camera LCD/EVF shows a totally different value. For example, I have shutter manual, aperture manual and ISO dial at 6400, the camera shows ISO at 4000, when I take pictures it will show ISO at 4000 and not 6400. When I try to choose another ISO value it will skip some of the available values that are shown on the dial. Another issue I am having is when my exposure dial is not set at specific value, then I cannot set ISO to Auto no matter what value I select on the dial. If I do select the different exposure compensation values, then I choose A for ISO, the camera will activate the front commend dial to manually change ISO values. To get in Auto ISO, the shutter speed cannot be set in auto and the ISO dial should be set at 125, when I turn the ISO wheel, it seems like the numbers are misaligned by one value, If I put the dial on A with shutter speed manual, then it will trigger the front commend dial. The other issue that I am having is when I have Aperture, shutter speed and ISO on manual, If I change the exposure dial compensation + or - , it actually changes the exposure of the picture as well as the ISO value, which as I understand, if Camera is in full manual, the exposure dial should do nothing. The last issue that I am having, if I do have ISO in manual at a set value, and adjust exposure compensation dial, it alters my ISO instead of my shutter speed or my aperture, even though ISO is in Manual and the other two dials are in Automatic. I am not really sure if all of this is by design and I am just not understanding how everything works together, but it seems really odd how everything changes. Resetting the camera settings didn’t help. 
    • I also have the eaxct problem with my X-T5. The remote used to work, but not anymore. I also get the light coming on on the camera back, and autofocus will happen, but no shutter release. Since I use the 2 or 10 seconds timer more I don't know if a firmware update is the cause of this negative change. I actualley only use the wired jack-remote for action release on a tripod.  Did anybody find a cause, and even more assisting, a solution?
    • I have the same issue. Have you found the the solution?
    • Welcome, dear visitor! As registered member you'd see an image here…

      Simply register for free here – We are always happy to welcome new members!

       
    • On my XPro 2 the rear command dial, when pressed, can cycle through 3 different magnification levels in the OVF.  
×
×
  • Create New...