08-07-2018 07:15 PM
I work in a concert hall and we have a Cannon T3i hanging from the ceiling down on the keys of a piano. The signal is sent via HDMI to a TV to show the audience what the pianist is playing. The issue is the signal gets turned off (even with continued power) after 25 minutes. We have tried putting a card in and actually recording it but it turns off in 12 minutes in this mode (Movie automatically stopped message). Are there any ways to get it to stay on and use it for this purpose?
Thank you in advance!
08-07-2018 07:31 PM
That is normal behavior for a DSLR. I suggest that you buy a camcorder, or an actual video camera, for what you want to do.
08-07-2018 11:23 PM
@Waddizzle wrote:That is normal behavior for a DSLR. I suggest that you buy a camcorder, or an actual video camera, for what you want to do.
Second that. One thing you must understand is that no DSLR can record video for more than 30 minutes. If it could, it would be taxed as a video camera by certain jurisdictions that tax them more heavily than still cameras.
08-09-2018 11:33 AM
Canon should make it clear that ALL their DSLRs are stills cameras that do video and are not video camera that shoot stills.
This all came about with the invention of Live View. Somebody got the bright idea that the LV could be recorded and here we are. Bottom line is you need a true video camera.
08-09-2018 11:58 AM
DSLR makers had to add video to compete with high-end point and shoots.
But then some filmakers realized that they could get shallow depth of field with the larger DSLR sensors. When that happened*, about 10 years ago folks made the mistake of thinking that DSLR's were video camera's as opposed to dogs walking on their hind legs.
*https://petapixel.com/2010/04/09/house-season-finale-filmed-entirely-with-canon-5d-mark-ii/
08-09-2018 12:41 PM
"But then some filmakers realized that they could get shallow depth of field with the larger cheaper cameras using a DSLR sensors."
The advent of video on a DSLR was, why not? All the componets were already there.
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