drounding
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Some may remember my original thread about motion blurring and stuttering a little while ago. There were lots of replies and explanations, some which seemed logical, other's which didn't. The general consensus was that it was due to a type of spyrographic effect of the speed of the car wheel vs the releative speed of the car and the road. That thread is here: http://www.talkphotography.co.uk/threads/motion-blur-and-stuttering.507565/ . That sort of made sense however, but......and now for the reason for 'part 2'.
Yesterday I was out in the park playing around catching some birds in flight. My intention was to get some semi-blurred images by panning the bird and using a slowish shutter speed. I achieved what I wanted and I am quite happy with the results but it also showed some so called stuttering again, yet this time of course there's no wheel to give the same affect as people suggested last time.
The two images below show the effect on the wings of the birds. At a slow shutter speed I would expect the bird's wings to be either blurred or not - not to exhibit a 'stutter'.
My initial thoughts are that the cause is due to the way in which the camera captures the images. In the camera the sensor (and electronics) has a period of time to capture the image, just how that data is collected and collated confuses me. The electronics are digital which suggests that some form of sampling must take place over the time the shutter is open which is then electronically accumulated for the period. If during that time the bird in (this case) moves then it is shown as a step movement in the accumulated data. I know the camera needs to be able to sample at extremely fast intervals for fast shutter speeds and I could thererfore be way off the mark here, but what other explanation is there that makes sense?

IMG_4274-10011 by DRounding, on Flickr

IMG_4262-10007 by DRounding, on Flickr
Yesterday I was out in the park playing around catching some birds in flight. My intention was to get some semi-blurred images by panning the bird and using a slowish shutter speed. I achieved what I wanted and I am quite happy with the results but it also showed some so called stuttering again, yet this time of course there's no wheel to give the same affect as people suggested last time.
The two images below show the effect on the wings of the birds. At a slow shutter speed I would expect the bird's wings to be either blurred or not - not to exhibit a 'stutter'.
My initial thoughts are that the cause is due to the way in which the camera captures the images. In the camera the sensor (and electronics) has a period of time to capture the image, just how that data is collected and collated confuses me. The electronics are digital which suggests that some form of sampling must take place over the time the shutter is open which is then electronically accumulated for the period. If during that time the bird in (this case) moves then it is shown as a step movement in the accumulated data. I know the camera needs to be able to sample at extremely fast intervals for fast shutter speeds and I could thererfore be way off the mark here, but what other explanation is there that makes sense?

IMG_4274-10011 by DRounding, on Flickr

IMG_4262-10007 by DRounding, on Flickr