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Have you any pictures directly from the E90 to share and confirm this?Is it possible that the lens on my E90 is just not as bad as others? Could this be one of the reasons behind some of the misunderstandings here? Every picture of the horizon I have is as flat as a pancake. I've drawn lines across every single one. Towers in the distance do not lean. What I am suggesting is that perhaps this is QA/QC issue with the lens. Some are good, some are not, others are in between. I'm not saying that is better by any means but it might explain some of this. It's like when Samsung had a certain number of batteries explode in their phones, they canned the whole lot. Something to ponder at least.
The focal length of E-90 is 8.3 mm
As Arruntus said Hayden did a strip down of the camera. He also approached Peau Productions on the subject and they didn't have any lens that would work, adding that a custom lens mount would have to be made to use an off the shelf lens.The alternative is that someone produces an aftermarket rectilinear lens. Has anyone taken the E90 apart to see how easy a lens swap would be?
It was me who did the recent tower inspection, it was a Single row 360° pano I shot in Manual configuration and manually shot and turned the camera shooting with at least a 50% image overlap. The images directly from the Camera 3 x 2 Ultra in the New "Vivid" would not stitch or align correctly using MSICE, PANO STUDIO 3, PT GUI, or even the Pano feature in my Photo director photo editing software. I ran a set the Mavic had taken. 14 shots using litchi, and they stitched seamlessly first time in Pano STUDIO 3, I did later "Fix" all the E90 images and created a pano, and it worked. The biggest problem with the E90 is. While we can get decent images from it. We have to fix every single picture, and rather than speed up the whole process of time and workflow, it actually adds to the workflow now. And time is Money. Really. This day and age and how far cameras have come on the latest UAVs, we shouldn't have to sit and fix each picture, for sure. Yes. Sit and edit some for that lovely looking final edit for a nice picture. But when it come to other parts of the job like 360 panos, Really we shouldn't have to correct each picture.That really doesn't mean anything without more information. You can fly the same mission twice and get one set of images that won't stitch for no apparent reason, and another that stitch just fine. Equally, stitching very much depends on which software you're using - some of the tools are optimised for DJI cameras, and some are just 'dumb stitchers' that don't know anything about the specifics of drone surveys. If I blamed the camera every time a stitch didn't come together, I'd have thrown all my kit in the bin by now.
It's right that fixing the distortion in the camera would lower the resolution of the output - if the lens is fisheye rather than rectilinear, then correcting the distortion involves cropping off the edges - and suddenly they'd have to advertise the 20Mp camera as being only 18Mp for stills. As resolution is everything for Orthomosaics, that would be a poor compromise. Most decent photo editing software has lens correction built in, so it should be possible for someone to produce an E90 profile to use in Photoshop etc. That would allow people who use the E90 for videography to have rectilinear output when needed.
The alternative is that someone produces an aftermarket rectilinear lens. Has anyone taken the E90 apart to see how easy a lens swap would be?
So, sony 20 mm len is a 30mm and sony 16 mm is a 24 mm23mm when applied as a 35mm full frame equivalent
Yes. Correct. Sony 16mm is 24mm (35mm equivalent) on APS-C size sensor.So, sony 20 mm len is a 30mm and sony 16 mm is a 24 mm
You have cast a doubt in my mind with this E90 camera. I shot videos (in 3840x2160) images to compare the words.
I put four images, I did not find any flagrant distortions that would cause to throw the E90. From the Horizon point of view, I have a bigger distortion on my X3 camera from the Inspire.
On the fourth imange, there are cranes and I did not find that they played at the tower of Pisa.
Did I have a good camera? What do you think ?
The CGO4 camera should be better, it has a bigger micro 4/3 sensor not 1". It also uses quality lenses. Apart from the case it's actually not a Yuneec camera it's a rebadged Panasonic GH4.
You have cast a doubt in my mind with this E90 camera. I shot videos (in 3840x2160) images to compare the words.
I put four images, I did not find any flagrant distortions that would cause to throw the E90. From the Horizon point of view, I have a bigger distortion on my X3 camera from the Inspire.
On the fourth imange, there are cranes and I did not find that they played at the tower of Pisa.
Did I have a good camera? What do you think ?
View attachment 8928 View attachment 8929 View attachment 8930 View attachment 8931
Go and take some 3 x 2 ratio pictures and put your horizon to the top by pointing camer down. Share direct uploads straight from SD card. Not some 1920 x 1080 screenshots.You have cast a doubt in my mind with this E90 camera. I shot videos (in 3840x2160) images to compare the words.
I put four images, I did not find any flagrant distortions that would cause to throw the E90. From the Horizon point of view, I have a bigger distortion on my X3 camera from the Inspire.
On the fourth imange, there are cranes and I did not find that they played at the tower of Pisa.
Did I have a good camera? What do you think ?
View attachment 8928 View attachment 8929 View attachment 8930 View attachment 8931
Go and take some 3 x 2 ratio pictures and put your horizon to the top by pointing camer down. Share direct uploads straight from SD card. Not some 1920 x 1080 screenshots.
RG,
What happens if you point YOUR camera level with the horizon (horizon in the center of the frame)? Do you still get the distortion?
Jeff
Of course, just because its not just as apparent with clouds and sky hiding it, does not mean that it does not exist. It is still there. More so in the corners. Using a 16 x 9 ratio screenshot and dropped to HD with horizon almost along the centre will "hide" most of it. Have a look at these images. One is a Google map shot, the other a stitch which did not go well.
RG,
Not what I was asking.
You told Claudius to put the horizon at the top of the frame by tilting the camera down. By doing so (pointing the camera off plane) one would expect to create the exact distortion shown in your image.
I am trying to distinguish between basic photography principles and a bad camera/lens.
If you were able to retake that shot referenced in your earlier post (134, I believe) with the horizon centered (sensor plane parrallel to the subject), I am curious if the same distortion would be present.
Experimenting and contemplating is all. Not making a statement one way or another.
Thanks!
Jeff
Jeff. I am not at home right now, here is one from the E90 straight down.
Have a look. You cannot deny this is not distortion. Nor is it the perspective. This building roof is straight as a dye in real life.
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