[poll] ISO speeds

which ISO speed is best for scooter photos

  • 80

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 100

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 200

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 800

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 1600

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • other

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    1

Aaron

Silver Member
It doesn't depend on anything Austin.
As seankane said, lower ISO, lower amount of noise.
My camera is capable of ISO of 80, so if i was you, i'd go with an ISO of 80.
 

seankane

Member
Aaron [BOYY! said:
]
It doesn't depend on anything Austin.
As seankane said, lower ISO, lower amount of noise.
My camera is capable of ISO of 80, so if i was you, i'd go with an ISO of 80.

what camera do you have? from what i heard mark 3's only go down to 100.
 

.erik

Member
d3s go down to like 50 i think. i shoot 100 iso during the day and around 200 in the night or whenever i need a flash
 

shupe6

Member
Aaron [BOYY! said:
]
It doesn't depend on anything Austin.
As seankane said, lower ISO, lower amount of noise.
My camera is capable of ISO of 80, so if i was you, i'd go with an ISO of 80.
yeah it depends on what im shooting
 

jorje

Member
well you should get it cause they are talking about photos. the amount of noise is like how grainy a pic is. Also do you know what iso is, it has todowith light so idk what that has to do with scooter pix.
 

Aaron

Silver Member
For any daytime photos, you should NEVER go over 100-200 iso.

To Seankane,
I have a fujifilm s9600.
Its pretty much the transition camera between a P&S and Dslr.

ISO changes alot of things, but unless you are really, really smart, you won't understand.
Mainly it changes the amount of light let in, along with Shutter/Aperature, and dictates the amount of noise in a photo.
The lower in the day, the better.
 

Andy Rhode

Member
seankane said:
Angus Lashwood said:
but don't you find that pics are always blurry at 80

if they're out of focus? thats not nothing to do with ISO. 80 will be crisp if you focused right.
yes it does. if you have the iso set to 80 the camera is less sensitive to light and then you have to use a lower shutterspeed. thus making the blur
 

Tom6

Member
Angus, quit photography now.
+ i think this is everyones opinion after reading your retarded posts.
yees fuucking photo cameras use iso, and they have noise.
+ to andy if youy use a high aperture and a corresponding shutter speed, so if yu shoot a F/28 you will probably get shutter speeds of a couple hundred secs at 80 ISO.l So no blur
 

molewood4

Member
angus im cool hahahahahahahahaahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahah
 
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