10-16-2020 02:02 PM
I've had one prior experience with Canon customer service, and it was terrible. I thought they'd never be able to match it, but now I can't contact them by phone at all, and their email form won't let me click the "submit" button to send communications that way either. Is there any way at all to get a customer service rep?
I've got more than $20,000 in Canon gear, one would think they'd provide some support.
10-16-2020 02:11 PM
Hi, fdfd! We'll be glad to provide you with support here on the Canon Community Forum. Please let us know what Canon product you've got and what kind of problem you're encountering and we'll be happy to help!
10-16-2020 02:44 PM - edited 10-16-2020 02:48 PM
Canon 1DX MkIII. Auto ISO is all over the map, and occasionally producing wildly inconsistent exposures from one shot to the next. Consider the two attached pics. These were taken a fraction of a second apart. The first was taken at ISO 640 and is properly exposed. The next shot in the series the camera jumped to 1600 ISO and completely blew it out.
I did a screeshot from Lightroom so you could see some of the data. These shots were taken back to back in less than one second, nothing changed with the lighting on the field. This was shot in manual exposure with Auto ISO. Why did it blow out the second pic? This isn't an isolated incident, I've got several like this from this game. Heck, one of them jumped to 10,000 ISO in broad daylight, completely washing the frame out.
10-16-2020 07:18 PM
Which metering mode were you using? I have shot a lot of day and night images with my 1DX III, (often using the 400 f2.8 also) and I haven't experienced those odd exposure variations.
I did find with my 1DX III that evaluative metering seems to work very well for sports. With my 1DX II for night high school U.S. rules football partial metering seemed to work best but since the pandemic I haven't had a chance to try out my 1DX III in that setting because it arrived at the end of February. For sports I always shoot manual with floating ISO and the 1DX III provides consistent results.
Rodger
10-17-2020 01:25 AM
I can't say for certain, but almost all of my shooting is done with spot metering.
I've had the same issue on my 5D MkIV as well. If I'm shooting baseball for example and right field is in shadow, with left field in the sun, the camera cannot do right with Auto ISO as I shift back and forth. I don't trust it at all.
10-17-2020 01:31 AM
Hi there,
Spot metering would be more susceptible to something like this, although it is not super common. Without seeing the spot the camera is metering from (linked to AF point or not) I could not say for sure that this is the case, but the metering point being placed on a white jersey, for example, and then to a darker area of the frame could definitely cause the camera to bump Auto ISO since it will be trying to reach the same exposure of the previous white area.
One possible solution, other than switching to a metering mode with a wider sample area, would be to limit the Auto ISO range. In a shooting situation like the one you show I would probably preset the Auto ISO between 100 to 800 to keep the exposure within an acceptable range even if the metering shifts too far.
10-17-2020 02:30 AM
This was a late afternoon game on a partly cloudy day, heading into sunset, and finishing under the lights. Limiting the ISO wouldn't be a solution, because I'd have to keep bumping up the upper end of the range to keep up with the decreasing amount of light as the game went on. If I have to do that, then I might as well not use auto ISO and just keep changing it manually every five or ten minutes.
Once it was dark and the only light available was from the field lights, the problem went away. The only time I have this issue is during daylight. Days when the clouds move in and out, changing the available light levels, or shooting on a field that's half in the shade and half in the bright sun would seem to be the perfect opportunity for Auto ISO to shine, but it routinely fails me on the 5D Mk IV and the 1DX MkIII. To be clear, it's not doing this on every shot, but it's enough that I'm losing some shots every time I try to use it.
I shoot a lot of night games and this never happens then, largely becuase the ISO pegs the high end of the range I allow (12,500) and pretty much stays there all night. At indoor venues like basketball and volleyball I've never had the issue. It's just during daylight.
10-17-2020 07:35 AM - edited 10-17-2020 08:39 AM
Spot metering does not work well for shooting sports in the situations you describe. It will work a little better if you tie it to the active AF point AND you consistently keep that point on the same part of the player but under dynamic lighting conditions where there is a huge contrast across a small part of the frame it will give you widely varying exposure values because it is looking at a tiny part of the scene which often switches from dark to light within a fraction of a second. Spot metering is really useful for static scenes where you have time to compose and evaluate scene lighting but that is the polar opposite of live sports shooting conditions.
Try shooting next time in a different metering mode, you will find that either the partial or center weighted average modes will work fine with auto ISO and prevent the wild variance you get from the spot being on a slightly different part of the scene. I prefer partial although I found that the 1DX III works surprisingly well with evaluative metering under some pretty lousy lighting conditions (strong side or backlighting with extreme contrast as the day transitions from afternoon to dusk).
These two shots were taken with the 1DX III and EF 400 f2.8 at a summer soccer conditioning drill. They are RAW files converted in DPP with NO recipe or additional processing applied, just reduced in size during JPG conversion. In the first, the camera chose ISO 160 and the second frame went to ISO 100 for nearly a full stop difference.
I had been using the 1DX III earlier that day to shoot some technical photos of electronic gear and used spot metering for that and I initially forgot to change that for the practice I shot. But this shows what can go wrong with spot metering during sports. The camera is doing what it was set up to do by the user but that isn't the proper metering for this type of action shot. I caught that setup issue quickly and switched to partial for the rest of the shoot and the 1DX III exposure was consistent and correct. I always shoot sports in full manual, usually with the lens wide open, and the ISO at auto. It works extremely well under partial and probably would also with center weighted average.
Rodger
10-17-2020 11:09 AM
@fdfd wrote:This was a late afternoon game on a partly cloudy day, heading into sunset, and finishing under the lights. Limiting the ISO wouldn't be a solution, because I'd have to keep bumping up the upper end of the range to keep up with the decreasing amount of light as the game went on. If I have to do that, then I might as well not use auto ISO and just keep changing it manually every five or ten minutes.
Once it was dark and the only light available was from the field lights, the problem went away. The only time I have this issue is during daylight. Days when the clouds move in and out, changing the available light levels, or shooting on a field that's half in the shade and half in the bright sun would seem to be the perfect opportunity for Auto ISO to shine, but it routinely fails me on the 5D Mk IV and the 1DX MkIII. To be clear, it's not doing this on every shot, but it's enough that I'm losing some shots every time I try to use it.
I shoot a lot of night games and this never happens then, largely becuase the ISO pegs the high end of the range I allow (12,500) and pretty much stays there all night. At indoor venues like basketball and volleyball I've never had the issue. It's just during daylight.
I agree with the opinion that Spot Metering is the most likely cause of your inconsistent exposures. I only use Spot Metering on a tripod shooting static scenes, never anything dynamic. Asking whether or not Spot Metering is linked to the active AF point raises another good point.
I think Evaluative Metering is better than people may give it credit. It does more than simply take an average reading of the scene. It also biases that reading to whichever AF point has locked focus. The keyword here is LOCKED focus.
Locking focus and accurate metering seem like they are joined at the hip. Metering an OOF scene will always be less accurate than metering a well focused scene. Metering does not lock until focus locks. When you are in AI Servo mode, both focusing and metering are constantly evaluating and updating.
I used to get outlier exposures until I made some changes to my settings, and it suddenly went away. I am not sure why it went it away, but it did. I was archiving photos one day, and realized that the outlier exposures were gone. It would always happen when I was in AI Servo mode, shooting continuously.
I was always using Evaluative Metering, so that was not the issue. I started using BBF, which gave my thumb something to do besides wander around bumping into the AE Lock button. I was using a 6D, so there was no joystick to keep my thumb occupied.
I also changed Image Priority to Focus Priority. This last change dramatically improved my keeper rate. Nearly all of my shots were sharply focused. Exposures were more consistent, too. I am guessing that metering works best when there is an actual focus lock, which may not always be the case using AI Servo and Continuous Drive mode.
10-18-2020 05:17 PM
@fdfd wrote:I can't say for certain, but almost all of my shooting is done with spot metering.
I've had the same issue on my 5D MkIV as well. If I'm shooting baseball for example and right field is in shadow, with left field in the sun, the camera cannot do right with Auto ISO as I shift back and forth. I don't trust it at all.
You do realize that the 5D Mark IV spot meters only at the center AF point. Right?
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