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Rolling shutter is a distortion your video, where objects tend to look slanted when you move your camera quickly. Not to get to technical, but it has to do with how fast the camera can get the information from the sensor to the processor. Cameras will read the sensor bottom to top, so if an object is changing quicker than the camera can process the image, this can make the object come out distorted. For example, common test camera reviewers use to measure rolling shutter issues is to film a telephone pole out of a moving car. The more slanted the telephone poles look, the worse the rolling shutter. Now the a6300 has very bad rolling shutter. Panning the camera quickly will cause the scene to take on an almost jello effect. This is not an issue if you do not move the camera too fast, but that depends on your needs. Check out this link for more info. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bQU1Jylk3jQ
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.rolling shutter is when the video has a "jello" like effect from moving the camera side to side too fast. It's pretty bad on the A6300, and all of Sony's 4K cameras. 4K is usually worse than 1080p in general, due to processing power.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I suggest you check youtube for examples on rolling shutter, but to answer your question: this camera has VERY NOTICEABLE and very bad rolling shutter in 4K, far more so that other cameras capable of recording 4k internally, or externally.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.it's jelly appearance of your video when you pan your camera or the subject you are taking video of is moving, like a running kid. This camera has this effect.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.4K video heats the camera such that it turns off. The manual says after 20 minutes. Without zooming you might be able to get 30 minutes out of it. It is not for long 4K video shooting.
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