Some really great answers here some good knowledge sharing going on. I learnt something and I hope you did too.
To answer my own question.
I shoot in 5k so I can crop the footage. When I fly I think of my flight as a rough cut, I already know I’m going to be reframing the shots a little in post. My flying isn’t perfect, and in post I get all the time in the world to sit and decide the best way to frame what I’ve got. For me the flying is like making a sketch, jotting down what I want in scribbles, the actual painting itself happens in post. 5k allows me to make a bigger sketch.
As for why I use a higher frame rate that’s a little more complicated to explain. I myself don’t worry about motion blur for two reasons, it’s hard to see motion blur on a tablet which is what most of us watch drone videos on, and second, I’m rarely fly fast near objects or doing fast turns where motion blur is created. The possibility for motion blur to be present isn’t even there in in 97% of my footage. I tend to shoot low and slow, and too much speed near objects means more visits to DJI to get a crashed drone fixed lol.
Another reason I tend to shoot in a higher frame rate, what if something unexpected happens while I’m shooting and I want to show it in slow mo, like a bird gracefully flying past the drone.
Last reason I shoot in higher frame rates, for digital pans in post. If I shoot at 24 FPS at 5k then want to do a 1080 or even 720 digital pan using 24 FPS footage, it’s looks bad. When you do a simple straight on crop your fine, but we are magnifying and moving side to side in a digital pan there aren’t enough frames to support that level of editing in post. I learnt that by trial and error, it’s not information your going to see in many how to YouTube videos. Try it for yourself, go shoot a piece of video at 24 then do a digital pan and zoom, you will see dropped frames and stutter, then shoot the same thing in a higher rate and repeat the process, the results are far more satisfactory.
In the old days when 24 FPS was born it worked well, most cameras were stationary didn’t move much and the framing of the shot was always perfect because it was decided in advance. That kind of filming doesn’t apply to a drone, unless your flying high and not near objects. Drones spin and move fast, they have nothing in common with an old school stationary conventional movie camera.
So that’s my opinion, and it’s just that, an opinion. What works for me may not work for you and that’s okay.