
pelican mirrors...
are those the ones that are only mirror reflective at an angle or something ?
anyway, with a pellicle mirror the shutter could be in the lens, and a few extra hundred quid as well as crunch tax could be slapped on lens rrp..![]()
Haven't they already 'done' pellicle mirrors though which stay put?
In similar vein - when I was doing a lot shooting, my mate used to say "Would we still shoot if the gun didn't go 'bang!'? "":shrug:Well personally, I just like the sound it makes![]()
Casio already has a compact model that does 40 fps or a 1000 fps video, turning the sensor on and off doesn't sound the problem. Wayne
I'm sure the drawback was -2/3 of a stop light loss due to the pelicle mirror affair.Indeed my EOS RT has one. The only difference is theirs no shutter slap.
I'm sure the drawback was -2/3 of a stop light loss due to the pelicle mirror affair.
Didn't the original 1D do some clever stuff about turning the sensor on/off to achieve the increbibly high shutter speed? Or am I imagining things...
edit - the original 1D did have an electronic shutter that allowed it to achieve 1/16000 s shutter speed. So it can be done, although that was a CCD sensor no CMOS, could make a difference?
-Quite a few Nikon CCD cameras have combined mechanical and electronic shutters.
Quite a few Nikon CCD cameras have combined mechanical and electronic shutters.
CCDs are interesting beasts. They read out data by shunting it across pixel by pixel, which must be done in complete darkness - so a shutter somewhere is handy. However, some CCDs (the ones in some motion cameras without rolling shutters) have lines which can take a charge but aren't sensitive to light, so a line of data can be shunted down/across and then read out before the next "exposure" (or in fact in twice the time of the exposure). Read this for the difference between full frame, frame transfer and interline CCDs.
CMOS sensors are a bit more useful for this though. You can read data off them almost like a focal plane shutter (start at one end, work to the other). As far as I can tell, the only reason we don't have electronic shutters on our CMOS cameras is that the A/D converters aren't yet up to the performance needed for acceptable pro-level frame rates with a high megapixel count. I strongly suspect that people smarter than us are working on it as we speak.
CCDs were replaced with CMOS because CMOS has had a lot more research recently and is now cheaper for the same performance. The advantage of a CMOS sensor is that it doesn't need to be kept in the dark, so it can be used for things CCDs can't like live view or a better movie mode. They've been used as light meters for a long time now.
Getting rid of the mirror would allow for much more efficient lens design, though only to a point. I remember reading something that Epson put out when they made the first digital rangefinder, the issue they found was that the microlenses on the sensor wouldn't accept light at the same angle as film would. They said at the time that was the reason for the 1.5x crop factor (though it was probably half that and half economics).