07-07-2024 01:43 PM - edited 07-19-2024 07:39 PM
Updated, but not solved. The update will be here at the top in italics. Everything below italics is the original post.
I have been in contact with Canon Tech Support - first by email. Three different technicians, a lot of back and forth questions asking pretty much the same thing that is scattered through this post. No one had any suggestions, but just a lot of questions on what I could have been doing wrong, none that panned out though. Finally did the phone option, and got a little further. This tech let me send in RAW files, could actually see what the concern was. He was also an astro-photographer, so when I explained various things, he understood what I was talking about. He also confirmed that I was not crazy... there is zero EXIF data for IBIS, only IS through the lens, which did not apply here. So again, we do not know what caused this, or what to do.
I asked "Is this the type of movement one would see IF the IBIS was still on, while on a tripod?" He replied there would be movement, but he cannot find anything saying it would be a small rotational type of movement. So now we are both trying to do some homework to find out.
This brings up a question for anyone here... Do any of you have any idea what type of movement that YOU get in your camera if you leave IBIS on (with a lens that does not have IS) while on a tripod? Out of all of my cameras, this is the only one with IBIS, so I cannot test this out myself since the technician and I agreed this would need to be tested with a different camera. I'm stuck and at a point where I have zero other resources to figure this out.
Thanks!
I have a question on some night sky images I have been taking with the R6 Mk ll. I should mention first that I am not new to night sky photography. I've been doing it since pre-digital days. I've also shot a lot of night sky images with 4 different Pentax DSLRs, 3 different Canon DSLRs, and now 3 different Canon Mirrorless bodies. The R6 Mk ll is the first camera I've experienced the following with.
If you look at the two attached images, one is nice and clear, the other seems to have a bit of a rotation to the whole image. I've only shot night sky images a few times with this camera. Last month I saw about 10% of my images had this weird rotation. I wrote it off as shifting sand around the tripod. Last night I was out taking about 100 shots. Very sporadic, but roughly half of them look like this. This last one was taken in the parking lot (solid ground - no shifting sand).
Few notes:
* Camera set to Manual mode
* IS turned off in camera
* The tripod is solid, tight connections on legs and ball head, and far from being underrated for this gear weight.
* I've used two different lenses where this is happening. Rokinon 14mm F/2.8 EF mount... Venus Optics Laowa 15mm F/2 RF mount. Both of these lenses are full manual - no auto setting, so the camera is set to shoot without a lens.
Am I missing something in the settings that is new to this specific camera? I've never had this happen on any other camera. Also, I only see this in night sky shots, when on a tripod. Day shots, on a tripod are never a problem.
07-08-2024 10:10 AM
I think I may have to do exactly this. I was hoping that after the previous 5 canon DSLR/Mirrorless models I've owned, they simply added some feature that I missed. Thank you, John!
07-08-2024 02:48 PM - edited 07-08-2024 02:49 PM
FWIW, I have the R6II, and just checked on the EXIF data, both using the properties of the file from Windows 11 File Manager, and Adobe Photoshop File Data:
07-08-2024 05:07 PM
I took the Photoshop file info one step further because I had almost exactly the same info as your screenshot, so I went to the RAW Data option further down the list. It has a lot more of the camera info, but nothing on IBIS. I don't have Windows, I have a Mac, and I'm a bit surprised there is even less info.
07-08-2024 06:20 PM
I suggest exiftool for viewing metadata. It runs as a command line program on macOS or Linux. Since I have retired and no longer have an employer to require Windows, I do not do Windows but long ago I used exiftool on Windows.
For example:
exiftool -s -G0:2 /Volumes/jrm/photos/2021Jun24/IMG_1931.CR3 | less # next view only image stabilization exiftool -s -G0:2 -ImageStabilization -a /Volumes/EOS_DIGITAL/DCIM/100CANON/IMG_0648.CR3 [MakerNotes:Camera] ImageStabilization : On (2) [MakerNotes:Camera] ImageStabilization : On (2)
The less program is included with macOS or Linux and is a pager for viewing text files.
For viewing IS on or off, the second command line lists both instances because I included "-a" on the command line. Usually when there are duplicate tags, they will have the same value.
Another program for viewing exif and other metadata is exiv2 which is built into rawtherapee and gimp. https://exiv2.org/ but I prefer exiftool.
Today, I put my old Minolta film camera lens on my EOS R5. I made 4 images with various IBIS settings. "exiftool -s -G0:2 -a -U -w out3/%f_%e.txt IMG_064[5-8].CR3" command line created a directory (folder) named "out" and placed 4 text files containing the metadata with the defined tag names plus "-U" caused the undefined tag names to be dumped as well. I used the diff program (comes with macOS or Linux) to compare the files. "diff out3/IMG_0646_CR3.txt out3/IMG_0647_CR3.txt | less"
I did not find any differences that I might attribute to the IBIS settings that I changed guessing that as is sometimes the case, the menu choices are represented as integers from zero to last choice. My first guess is that the camera menu choices for IBIS are not recorded in the CR3 file, but it is possible that I just did not find them. The "-ImageStabilization" tag reports IS on or IS off for some lenses and might report IS mode 1, 2, or 3. Except for the tag names that are part of a standard such as EXIF, XMP, or IPTC, the tag names were chosen by the program maintainer to represent what information the tag appears to contain.
The "MakerNotes" tags are specific to the camera manufacturer and are not part of a standard.
The Metadata Working Group is trying to standardize more tags. https://exiftool.org/TagNames/MWG.html
07-10-2024 09:56 AM
Having read most of the responses, I would speculate that the sensor is not quite mounted solidly. (It doesn't take much). When the shutter releases (if your using mechanical shutter) it may be causing the sensor to shift. This is wild speculation, but you've eliminated just about anything else. Are you getting the same results when shooting daytime images?
07-10-2024 11:00 AM
All of my daytime images are fine. I've shot around 1,000 daytime images while we were on vacation, which was after the first time this happened at night, and before this latest time. All hand held... which points back to the tripod again. However, the tripod is solid. I set it up again yesterday just because I'm famous for overkill on checking things. It takes a good thump to take a photo showing vibration. I don't mean a big hit... but what I mean is a lot harder than hitting the shutter button than I normally do (I have a light touch in general), and only if I turn the 2 second delay off. So... it points back to the camera again.
07-10-2024 11:24 AM
@justadude wrote:
All of my daytime images are fine. I've shot around 1,000 daytime images while we were on vacation, which was after the first time this happened at night, and before this latest time. All hand held... which points back to the tripod again. However, the tripod is solid. I set it up again yesterday just because I'm famous for overkill on checking things. It takes a good thump to take a photo showing vibration. I don't mean a big hit... but what I mean is a lot harder than hitting the shutter button than I normally do (I have a light touch in general), and only if I turn the 2 second delay off. So... it points back to the camera again.
If using a lens with no electronics, I suggest trying it with IBIS enabled and the focal length for IBIS set in the camera menu.
I expect that a lens with no electronics is the least tested part of the firmware. I guess there might have been more testing done with IBIS enabled than disabled.
The most recent version of exiftool will report pitchangle and rollangle for some cameras. If that works for your camera, it will tell you whether the camera moved. It only works for EOS R5 with firmware versions 1.5 or later.
07-11-2024 10:57 AM
For anyone following this thread, a minor update... I've been emailing back and forth Canon Tech Support. They agree from the various photos I've sent that it is not a lens problem, or a tripod problem. Currently waiting to hear back on a few IBIS questions. Hoping to get it resolved without sending this in for warranty work since this is my busiest time of the year with this camera.
Stay tuned.
07-19-2024 10:42 PM
Bumping this back up in the forum due to today’s update. Apparently if I just update the post, it stays buried.
07-20-2024 07:28 AM
@justadude wrote:
Updated, but not solved. The update will be here at the top in italics. Everything below italics is the original post.
...
This brings up a question for anyone here... Do any of you have any idea what type of movement that YOU get in your camera if you leave IBIS on (with a lens that does not have IS) while on a tripod? Out of all of my cameras, this is the only one with IBIS, so I cannot test this out myself since the technician and I agreed this would need to be tested with a different camera. I'm stuck and at a point where I have zero other resources to figure this out.
Thanks!
...
I have only one lens without electronics. It is a nearly 50 year old MC ROKKOR-X PG 1:1.4 f=50mm from a film camera that I use with an Urth adapter. I hope some of my guesses might be helpful.
My first guess is that it is a firmware bug that is causing your problem and that it will be fixed in a future firmware update if your raw files get to the right engineer.
After I saw your post, I put that old Minolta lens on my EOS R5 and tried to see any difference in the undefined metadata tags when I changed the IBIS settings in the camera menu. I found no differences in the metadata that seemed to me plausible indicators of the camera menu settings for IBIS, so the statement about it not being in the exif is likely true. For my EOS R5 and EF100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM lens, the metadata also does not show the position of the IS mode switch on the lens so far as I have been able to find. I expect that it is not good advice to tell you to look for an IS setting in exif.
The hardware and electronics for IBIS must always be active to keep the sensor positioned. Based upon that, I always turn on IBIS in the camera menu when using the Minolta lens and always set the focal length for IBIS in the camera menu.
It seems to me that the behavior of IBIS has changed with nearly every firmware update for the EOS R5. Recent versions will track a star when the camera is hand held and tracking is enabled in the menus. For one version of the firmware, IBIS would forget the focal length when the camera went to sleep and woke back up and a power cycle was needed to make it work again or it could be avoided by changing the power settings to disable "power off". I always found writing sleep and wake routines in firmware difficult because what state the various chips preserved was not well documented and one had to guess which settings needed to be restored on wake from low power state, but that was decades ago. It has seemed to me I have needed to change the camera settings I used with each new firmware version. My guess is that using a lens without electronics was not tested so much as more commonly used lenses.
If you can get Canon support to accept more raw files that illustrate the transition from no problem to big problem and send those files to engineers, the engineers might be able to create a firmware fix.
Meanwhile, the things that have seemed to me to change the IBIS behavior in various firmware versions include power settings, menu settings for IBIS including focal length, and AF tracking menu settings even when the lens has no AF. My guess is that the IBIS can move the sensor to track or not track even when the lens has no AF.
The sensor will move because of changes in temperature inside the camera, for example, and the IBIS will need to compensate.
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