DJI Mavic, Air and Mini Drones
Friendly, Helpful & Knowledgeable Community
Join Us Now

Flying at night

tca

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 8, 2018
Messages
186
Reactions
154
Age
76
I have the Mavic pro2 and could someone tell me what camera settings you use
when flying / filming at night.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Chris4koi
Video at night is always tough to take. If I change to manual mode, I switch the ISO until the video on the monitor shows that there is a decent amount of light, with as little grain as possible. It sorta of depends on what your ok with. I ussually use 1600 iso and leave evrything else on auto.

Try this, drive to a lit parking lot and fly up a hundred feet or so and just hover. Switch your camera's modes to manual one by one. Then try different combinations of adjustments. Write down what you did for each video. Then you can take your SD card home and see what kind of results you got with the setting s you made.

Others will have more to say, i'm sure.
 
In your case with a Mavic 2 Pro you have 3 exposure parameters to modify.

1. ISO - Higher value amplifies the noise in the vid or picture but require less light to expose correctly
2. Shutter speed - Too long & you risk to get motion blur due to craft movements, try not to go longer than 2sec (stills).
3. Aperture - A more open aperture (smaller value) will let in more light per time unit. Smaller value makes for a shorter shutter ... or a possibility to instead chose a lower ISO value.

So in real life low light conditions and with the M2P you set the aperture to the smallest possible value, then try to fight motion blur with a not too long shutter speed, usually 2sec is the longest where you have a possibility to get a couple sharp ones out of several tries. If the image still is under exposed the only parameter that you have left is the ISO, ramp that up until you're satisfied with the exposure & can live with the increased noise level.

When you think you have a set exposure ... snap away several pictures & hope a couple come out reasonably sharp. Also be prepared to give the best shots some enhancements in post when you come home ... you can reduce the noise, light up darker parts in the pic or the opposite, make too bright spots darker. Then sharp the pic up a bit.

For videoing it's mainly the same exposure parameters but here you cant go slower with the shutter than the frame rate, that's why filming in the dark will be more difficult. With for instance 25fps the shutter can't be slower than 1/25sec ... which is very much quicker than those max. 2sec I recommend for stills, meaning that you need to crank up the ISO value quite a bit in order to get even close to a proper exposure.

It's possible to be lucky & get a sharp photo during night conditions but a lot of editing is usually needed to get them to be usable.

Here a couple examples from my Mavic Air 1 (which have a far inferior camera than the M2P)

Night:
1631026832204.png

1631026904409.png

1-2 hours after the sunset:
1631026984418.png

1631027042826.png

1631027088758.png
 
Thanks for sharing guys …. Very useful info!
 
Video at night is always tough to take. If I change to manual mode, I switch the ISO until the video on the monitor shows that there is a decent amount of light, with as little grain as possible. It sorta of depends on what your ok with. I ussually use 1600 iso and leave evrything else on auto.

Try this, drive to a lit parking lot and fly up a hundred feet or so and just hover. Switch your camera's modes to manual one by one. Then try different combinations of adjustments. Write down what you did for each video. Then you can take your SD card home and see what kind of results you got with the setting s you made.

Others will have more to say, i'm sure.
I did something similar. I set the drone off to fly, changing different exposures and using my iPhones voice memos to record the different settings.
 
In your case with a Mavic 2 Pro you have 3 exposure parameters to modify.

1. ISO - Higher value amplifies the noise in the vid or picture but require less light to expose correctly
2. Shutter speed - Too long & you risk to get motion blur due to craft movements, try not to go longer than 2sec (stills).
3. Aperture - A more open aperture (smaller value) will let in more light per time unit. Smaller value makes for a shorter shutter ... or a possibility to instead chose a lower ISO value.

So in real life low light conditions and with the M2P you set the aperture to the smallest possible value, then try to fight motion blur with a not too long shutter speed, usually 2sec is the longest where you have a possibility to get a couple sharp ones out of several tries. If the image still is under exposed the only parameter that you have left is the ISO, ramp that up until you're satisfied with the exposure & can live with the increased noise level.

When you think you have a set exposure ... snap away several pictures & hope a couple come out reasonably sharp. Also be prepared to give the best shots some enhancements in post when you come home ... you can reduce the noise, light up darker parts in the pic or the opposite, make too bright spots darker. Then sharp the pic up a bit.

For videoing it's mainly the same exposure parameters but here you cant go slower with the shutter than the frame rate, that's why filming in the dark will be more difficult. With for instance 25fps the shutter can't be slower than 1/25sec ... which is very much quicker than those max. 2sec I recommend for stills, meaning that you need to crank up the ISO value quite a bit in order to get even close to a proper exposure.

It's possible to be lucky & get a sharp photo during night conditions but a lot of editing is usually needed to get them to be usable.

Here a couple examples from my Mavic Air 1 (which have a far inferior camera than the M2P)

Night:
View attachment 134591

View attachment 134592

1-2 hours after the sunset:
View attachment 134593

View attachment 134594

View attachment 134595
What software do you use?
 
Very Nice -
Right On
 
In your case with a Mavic 2 Pro you have 3 exposure parameters to modify.

1. ISO - Higher value amplifies the noise in the vid or picture but require less light to expose correctly
2. Shutter speed - Too long & you risk to get motion blur due to craft movements, try not to go longer than 2sec (stills).
3. Aperture - A more open aperture (smaller value) will let in more light per time unit. Smaller value makes for a shorter shutter ... or a possibility to instead chose a lower ISO value.

So in real life low light conditions and with the M2P you set the aperture to the smallest possible value, then try to fight motion blur with a not too long shutter speed, usually 2sec is the longest where you have a possibility to get a couple sharp ones out of several tries. If the image still is under exposed the only parameter that you have left is the ISO, ramp that up until you're satisfied with the exposure & can live with the increased noise level.

When you think you have a set exposure ... snap away several pictures & hope a couple come out reasonably sharp. Also be prepared to give the best shots some enhancements in post when you come home ... you can reduce the noise, light up darker parts in the pic or the opposite, make too bright spots darker. Then sharp the pic up a bit.

For videoing it's mainly the same exposure parameters but here you cant go slower with the shutter than the frame rate, that's why filming in the dark will be more difficult. With for instance 25fps the shutter can't be slower than 1/25sec ... which is very much quicker than those max. 2sec I recommend for stills, meaning that you need to crank up the ISO value quite a bit in order to get even close to a proper exposure.

It's possible to be lucky & get a sharp photo during night conditions but a lot of editing is usually needed to get them to be usable.

Here a couple examples from my Mavic Air 1 (which have a far inferior camera than the M2P)

Night:
View attachment 134591

View attachment 134592

1-2 hours after the sunset:
View attachment 134593

View attachment 134594

View attachment 134595
Amazing shots with an Mavic air 1 , dude!
 
  • Like
Reactions: slup

DJI Drone Deals

New Threads

Members online

Forum statistics

Threads
130,599
Messages
1,554,244
Members
159,603
Latest member
refrigasketscanada