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Beqa

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  1. Like
    Beqa got a reaction from thebrothersthre3 in Short cinematic test using Sony a6300   
    Here is a simple cinematic test using my new a6300 camera. 
     
     
  2. Like
    Beqa got a reaction from Stanley in Short cinematic test using Sony a6300   
    Here is a simple cinematic test using my new a6300 camera. 
     
     
  3. Like
    Beqa got a reaction from Justin Bacle in Short cinematic test using Sony a6300   
    Here is a simple cinematic test using my new a6300 camera. 
     
     
  4. Like
    Beqa got a reaction from jonpais in My Review of the Zhiyun Crane 3-Axis Gimbal   
    Here is little test with my Sony a6300 and Zhiyun Crane
     
     
  5. Like
    Beqa got a reaction from DPC in Damaged SD Card   
    Hi there, 
     
    My SD card died about a month ago. It is Sony 128GB Class 10 UHS-1/U3 SDXC  card with full of media(videos and pictures of 1 month eurotour in 10 countries).
    Computer can`t detect it. So the hardware is dead.
    I tried professional file recover service and they also failed to recover my files. Is there any other way which I can try? 
    I`m not a tech guy but theoriticly is it possible to move only the part of the card from inside where the files are saved and move in to another card(which would be visible to computer) and access it that way?  
    Also I`ve read some info about putting it in freezer about 15 minutes.. Does it really works?
  6. Like
    Beqa reacted to Michael Ma in My Review of the Zhiyun Crane 3-Axis Gimbal   
    I'd say with the Crane, the video would look about 90-95% identical.  You can change how the pitch is corrected (follow or stabilized) to allow jib like pitch correction which will open up a few more creative shot options.  
    What it would help with would be the sudden shifts to the YAW axis which a very few are present in the video.  It will smooth those out.  At that height, there probably isn't much ROLL or PITCH stabilization required.  Much of the unwanted motion, if you are looking for a perfectly smooth shot, is the up and down motion.  To stabilize that, it's all in your technique of walking and holding your gimbal.  You have to walk flat footed and hold the gimbal horizontally as far as comfortably possible away from the body.
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