Camera RAW is very noisy in low light - OnePlus 8 Questions & Answers

Hey ,
I don't know why , when i'm shooting RAW on the camera i have lots of noise at night.
Even when i using 100-200 ISO.
Does anyone know how to fix it?

Related

lag on front camera

did anyone noticed that`s the front camera with (no effect)is too laggy specially in low light?
if i change the effect like( vignette )the camera begain very smothly
is that`s a softwear of a hardware issue?
That's normal. In low light the shutter speed goes down to low values e.g. 1/15 to have the exposure right, which means that you'll see stutering (1/15 = 15 fps). With the effects enabled, the picture becomes darker. Technically, the issue is with the effects, not the normal mode.

Camera slow focus and shutter speed.

do you guys find the camera abit slow on focusing and when we press shoot the shutter will also slow? im not able to take my 1 YO son's photo without blurry face. :crying:
Occasionally in dodgy lighting (especially indoors). I get the sharpening image message.

Camera. low light ambience. Giant issues. Help please.

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BxQNkzYoxFMjWk11MmN1ZnhGcmc/view?usp=drivesdk
Is that normal? Lenses are crystal clean!!!!!!
You didn't keep the camera steady enough, try using a tripod for low light / long exposures
Low light keeps the shutter open for longer, so any tiny movements you make will show as blur like your photo

Video recording on stock camera app and gcam

Hello all,
I have a few questions concerning the quality of video recording on stock and gcam app. Kinda disappointed about the quality, and you maybe able to tell me if it's normal or if I could fix it (first of all, sorry for my english, not my mother tongue).
I found that in 1080 30 fps, outdoor videos, the details are really poor, even with sufficient light. It seems to be "grainy" (1st link below).
Inside videos with low light (my place around 10pm with 1 ceiling light on) are very blurry, especially on the corners. The autofocus is messy (not focusing, or hardly in automatic mode, I have to go through manuel focusing, and it's not always working).
When I switch to 1080p 60 fps, the video is much darker, is that normal ? (I heard it is).
I'm running the beta 6, with the latest gcam port app.
The links I provide are google photos updates.
Do you think it's normal, or the OP6 I own has an hardware issue ?
Thanks
1st link, outside in 30 fps https://photos.app.goo.gl/5q325n8771afVhYy9
my place, low light in 30 fps https://photos.app.goo.gl/Q98PdfhSehKfqKQb8
my place, low light in 60 fps https://photos.app.goo.gl/zsayngZK9rvNPMHJ6

Video Problem

Hi, i have been watching a lot of videos in reviews and youtube and i have noticed a common problem in video recording, like some frame dropping. You can check in this video with the train movement.
youtube.com/watch?v=88KVStbePvA#action=share
(i can't share the full link, please put the http an 3w first)
Is any way to fix it?
Thanks!
Hi,
yes it is.. Disabling EIS helps a lot, but mostly it works without often frame drops using FilmicPro or Open Camera ( this is most stable for video recording).
About fix for a stock camera, I would not put many hopes for it, even Mi 10 Pro with SD 865 does video with stutters. I believe this most of software problem.
Similar to what Dom said. I don't think it's frame drop, it looks like the image EIS stabilisation is getting confused with the scene moving at different speeds. It's probably trying to track train motion and floor motion.
Try again with image stabilisaion disabled. If you need steady footage maybe see if your video editor handles it better.
Also in the low light scenes the EIS gives footage a weird ghosting effect (even the GoPro7 does it).
I wish there was an auto disable EIS in low light option
Shouldnt the OIS help? So its not completely unstabillized? That should work for video as well and maybe evene better?
ond96 said:
Shouldnt the OIS help? So its not completely unstabillized? That should work for video as well and maybe evene better?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
OIS is always on and cannot be turned off as it's a physical part of the camera sensor. However the OIS level of stabilisation is subtle compared to EIS

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