View Full Version : Dynamic stabilizer test: Canon hf s 11


Lou Bruno
November 8th, 2009, 09:43 AM
YouTube - CANON HF S 11 DYNAMIC STABILIZER TEST (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X1vF5UjG0Lk)



The last scene was with the camera on top of the car dashboard.

Click HD for better quality.

Used the menu driven Dynamic setting and a small monopod. Not perfect but better than menu-driven stabilizers of the past.

Dan Munk
November 8th, 2009, 12:48 PM
Thanks Lou, would you say that the stabilization for the HFS11 is worth upgrading from HFS10/S100?

How were you using the monopod when you where walking?

Thanks.

Stuart Robinson
November 8th, 2009, 06:18 PM
Used the menu driven Dynamic setting and a small monopod. Not perfect but better than menu-driven stabilizers of the past.
Please don't take offense, but that made me feel quite seasick. I think unstabilized footage might have been more palatable because it wouldn't have had that unnatural swaying motion, in fact I was quite surprised by how much movement there was in that footage.

Quick sort-of related question; which lens did you use, it looked quite wide given the amount of barrel distortion?

Lou Bruno
November 8th, 2009, 06:56 PM
No offense taken. This was a test of the internal menu DYNAMIC stabiliser. That's as good as it will get. Better than the HF S10 which is almost impossible to keep from shaking due to the lightness. However, it appears to me after the test that the stabilizer is only good for static shots when the camera person is NOT moving. Much better than the static shots from my prior HF S10.

The lens had barrell distortion as I mixed a FISHEYE with the CANON wideangle lens. The CANON HD wideangle is totally necessary as the field of view is rather narrow with the enclosed lens.

Yes...I tried a monopod configuration both vertical and horizontal.

By no means is this a steady cam menu driven stabilizer.

Kevin Bjorke
November 9th, 2009, 08:43 AM
umm, monopod WITH stabilizer? A case that Canon cautions against in the manual?

I occasionalyfoget and put the camea on a tripod without disabling the d-IS. The frame moves occasionally, because the IS "eye" detects motion.

That eye may have also been confused by an accessory lens. I've beeen trying to figure out of my old WD-58a confuses it or not....

Lou Bruno
November 9th, 2009, 06:19 PM
That is possible that the lens can cause a focus problem, though I picked up digital artifacting somehow. The monopod can be used with the stabilizer as long as it is not perfectly steady. A tripod is a NO NO and I always shut off the stabilzer for static and steady tripod work. In this case the monopod was moving up and down and handheld. It looked worse with the stabilizer off as the monopod was not a steady-cam type of set-up.