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Paul Hilton Posts: 2605 Joined: 21st Nov 2004 Location: UK | quotePosted at 19:02 on 13th June 2013 The continuous frame rate for the 1Ds MKII was 4 fps, though I very rarely use this feature on any of my cameras. But others may well find it useful, and the D3's rate for its 12 meg RAW images is 9 fps, but needs a rest at around 20 pics to clear the buffer ( and an upgrade was later offered for those who wanted to pay for a larger buffer), but if shooting Jpegs, I think it runs to around 64 images continuous before it catches the buffer up, as the images are being processed and written to the card. I find it amazing what's going on inside a Dslr at these sort of speeds taking photos; in the D3's case, 9 times every second it's checking the focus, the exposure, taking the pic and sending it on it's way to be processed. If a DX lens was fitted ( now 5 meg pic sized), the rate went to 11 fps. Its full frame stable mate, the D700 ran to 8 fps with the optional grip fitted, or 5 fps without. |
Edward Lever Posts: 734 Joined: 22nd Dec 2005 Location: UK | quotePosted at 08:27 on 14th June 2013 My limited experience of sports photography (rowing, athletics etc) has led me to believe that I need a frame rate of at least 5 fps to get decent action shots. My old Canon EOS3 film SLR is capable of 7 fps with its battery booster grip attached. The big downside of using it at this frame rate was that it could empty a whole 36 exposure film cassette in around 5 seconds ! With film, there were obviously no image processing issues for the camera to worry about. There was some limited processing for exposure and auto-focus, but the limitations of speed were largely mechanical in terms of mirror actuation and film transport. As you say, with a digital camera, there is a great deal of data processing going on. With the professional DSLRs, the large image size and fast frame rate usually requires multiple processors to handle the data fast enough. |
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