Most cameras these days can take quite a few photos on a single charge, but this week I am going to share some tips for getting more life and more shots out of the camera’s battery.
1.) GPS - This is a unique feature that a lot of new cameras have these days, but unless you need to tag your location during a shoot, keep this item off. In the course of a day, GPS can drain up to 20% on your battery.
2.) WiFi - Again this is another neat feature to have on a newer model camera, but unless you need to actually use it, keep it off. The last thing you need your camera doing during a shoot is constantly hunting for WiFi networks.
3.) Sleep Mode - This is a nice item that is on most camera’s menus. Setting the sleep mode to the lowest time possible will allow your camera to save battery life in between shots and the camera wakes pretty much instantly when you press a button. Turning your camera on and off all the time doesn’t really extend the battery life any more than Sleep Mode but it takes a bit to boot back up and you could miss a shot.
4.) Review Time - If you are skilled at using your camera, you can set the lowest possible review time. I personally don’t use the Review at all on my cameras, and most Pros don’t either.
5.) Continuous Focus - Don’t use this if you don’t need it. It can make shooting harder if you need to recompose, but if you are shooting objects that are not moving, it just drives the focus motor constantly and drains the battery.
6.) Image Stabilization - This feature is very handy at have in your camera system at times, but if shooting on a tripod, it can actually impose movement where there should be none.
7.) Live View - Live view is one of the biggest battery drains on a camera system. The viewfinder is there for a reason, photographers got by for centuries without Live View.
8.) Silent Mode - If you don’t need it for the shooting you are doing, turn it off. My EOS 6D has two silent shooting modes and I love to use them when photographing wildlife as even the newest cameras have some clacking when taking photos. If I am shooting a car show or portraits, I turn it off to save battery life.
9.) Built-in Flash - I am not even sure why any cameras come with this these days because they are a huge battery hog, their performance is crap, so why bother put them on cameras to begin with?
10.) In Camera Post Processing - Again, not sure why cameras even have this as you can do a way better job with Lightroom or Photoshop.
11.) Focus Beep - It does not consume a huge amount of battery life but adds up over time and the beeps are annoying anyways.
12.) Light Optimizer and Noise Reduction - Again, not sure why either of these are in cameras to begin with and you can do a better job in your post production software.
13.) RAW + JPG - I know some people like having this ability but you are writing double images every time you press the shutter so you know this is sucking up memory.
Once you’ve turned these all off, you should see anywhere from a 20% even upwards of 40% increase in battery life and total shots you can take per charge.
Comments/Questions
Showing posts with label life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label life. Show all posts
Sunday, April 24, 2016
Tuesday, February 11, 2014
Testing 1, 2, 3?
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Greetings fellow shooters! Tuesday
Ambassador Stanley, here welcoming you to another... testing… can anybody read
this, Tuesday? And no, this is not going to be like my last week’s post on Rantom.
What I am going to write about is why every student, or anyone for that matter,
should test their equipment, regardless of ever having worked with the
equipment before. However, I have seen a good majority of students doing just
that and it is an excellent thing to do because it makes you more familiar with
your equipment before tackling those shooting assignments. So if you think that
you may be the only person that pulls your equipment out of the box, puts it
together and starts tinkering with it, just know that you’re not the only one.
Although, be mindful of the equipment you are working with in order to prevent
injuries to beings or damage to equipment whether they are big or small.
Now if you are not one who
typically dives into unfamiliar territory, I am sure you are not alone. That is
okay though because you are going to school for photography after all. For some
people though, school is not enough. One thing that you could do is READ
through your manual after breaking into the package and laying out all of your
equipment to be assembled later. This should be done on day one of receiving your
package because you want to make sure that you have everything and that nothing
is broken. If you do not understand something, reach out! There is a plethora
of resources available at your disposal like PSPN on
Google+, your upcoming or present instructors and if you want fast answers then
you better resort to your most favored search engine like Google. Once you have everything all squared
away it’s time to setup and test out your equipment. Make sure everything
works! Test the highs and test the lows. Make sure your equipment is in
flawless working order because I’m sure there is nothing like returning your
faulty equipment and having to switch, stop or drop out of your class because
you did not meet the deadline. I assure you that I’m not talking from
experience.
One thing I learned through my curiosities
in life about things I had no prior knowledge of, yet having full access to
whatever it is that interested me, was in order to dig deeper about your
subject, you have to break it. No, I’m not telling you to go break your
equipment because that would be foolish and by no means is that what I meant! What
I mean is I was always one who would get a toy, get bored with it, take it
apart, study it and put it back together just to play with it again. Maybe that’s
the reason why computers had been a hobby of mine for so long because of how quickly it advanced over the years. Now you don’t necessarily have to apply
my experience to a specific subject, however, if you apply it to your life you
may find yourself subconsciously applying it to subjects that interest you as
well. Sure, I know that is a lot to ask but I do not think you would regret making the change.
Was this informative or
inspirational? Let me know in the comments below. Have you felt this before? Do
you think you are the only one? Are you getting a little freaked out because I
am getting into your head and I may possibly know what you are thinking right
now at this exact moment? Ha! Who am I
kidding? I cannot read your mind. Stay tuned next week to catch a glimpse of my
studio studies as well as my recently published work, and as always, thanks for
reading.
-Tues. Amb. Stanley
Long link goes to the image above by a no name photographer: http://static.videomaker.com/sites/videomaker.com/files/styles/vm_image_token_lightbox/public/articles/15346/306-F21-microphone-close-up.jpg?itok=k3IAaLWJ
Long link goes to the image above by a no name photographer: http://static.videomaker.com/sites/videomaker.com/files/styles/vm_image_token_lightbox/public/articles/15346/306-F21-microphone-close-up.jpg?itok=k3IAaLWJ
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Tuesday
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