CanadaDrone
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Awesome...thank you I'll check out the brands you mentioned and see what I can find.
Do you happen to have an opinion about "fixed" vs "variable" ND filters? I like the idea of having just Variable ND filters rather than a whole slew of "fixed" ND filters. Do you feel like ND filters are needed to get smooth cinematic footage in bright sunny conditions. I still need to do my own research but thought I would ask different people's opinnions on the topic.
If you are at all serious about shooting video, you really do need a set of ND filters, especially on a drone like the Air 2S which does not have a variable aperture. You always want to shoot at the lowest ISO possible for maximum image quality, and since the aperture is not variable, that leaves ND filters as pretty well your only option to control wider swings in exposure (you still need ND filters on variable aperture drones like the M2P, just not as many). Getting good quality footage is pretty much impossible without ND filters.
As you may have already read, the general rule of thumb is to keep your shutter speed around double the frame rate, so for example if you were shooting 4K/30p you would want a 1/60 shutter speed. The idea is that ratio gives you the most realistic/cinematic footage similar to what humans see with the naked eye, particularly in terms of motion blur. That is simply a guideline and there is some wiggle room there - for example if I am going to be flying really close to something and at speed, I raise the shutter speed a bit as it can start to get a bit too blurry for my liking. Use that rule as a guide and feel free to play around with it. When your shutter speed gets too high, the footage will look like it's stuttering and will generally just look very unnatural (especially noticeable with something like ocean waves). If the shutter speed is too low, everything will be blurry, and that will be exaggerated the faster you fly and/or the closer you fly to something.
Regarding variable NDs, there is nothing wrong with them (as long as they do not rotate at all by themselves during flight), but they are somewhat pointless because you still have to land the drone to adjust it. I guess it saves you from having to remove/replace a filter, but chances are you aren't going to need to adjust the ND filter for any given ~25 minute flight anyway. Also, variable ND filters have a second piece of glass in them, and any time you introduce extra layers of glass, you technically reduce image quality and increase chance of flare/reflections. It's unlikely you would notice any quality difference in real world shooting though. Just make sure you are not buying a graduated ND filter, which are just as much of a nightmare to use on drones as polarizing filters unless used for a very specific purpose.
You really only need 4 filters for 99% of scenarios (ND 4, 8, 16, 32). If you are going to fly over white sand or snow in bright sunlight, you may need ND64. If you wanted to do some low-shutter-speed photography, for example to blur the movement of a waterfall, you may also need a ND64 or higher.
PolarPro makes a VND covering ND4-32 and that would be all you needed for most scenarios if you wanted to go that route. A ND4 cuts 2 stops of light (25% transmission), and it is halved thereafter every time the ND number doubles - so a ND8 cuts 3 stops (12.5% transmission), ND16 cuts 4 stops of light (6.25% transmission), etc. When I had a drone limited to F2.8, by far my most used ND's were 8 and 16.