johnnygoesdigital
New member
"As soon as I saw the image in the first post, I knew this was a CF card issue."
Graham Mitchell-
That's probably where I got that from Graham...
Jagsiva,
My suggestion was from reports of many CFV DB's, that have had color casts issues or artifacts, from too much pressure on the mechanical shutter release prior to exposure. The manual for a CFV even mentions this anomaly . It's more common in the mechanical cameras because of the way they're triggered, but a faulty shutter or electronic component in this area for any camera could do the same, but given that only part of the image is corrupt, i'm not so sure.
A dark frame is usually taken with long exposures, a 10 min. exposure= a 10 minute dark frame to allow the DB to remove noise, so not sure about that. Have you tried to tether or download images with the CF in the camera? One interesting thing noted by Graham is the fact that the color cast shows up in the brighter areas. It's almost flare-like in it's appearance. Also, watch the status light on the DB for unusually long or short write times after capture.
Graham Mitchell-
That's probably where I got that from Graham...
Jagsiva,
My suggestion was from reports of many CFV DB's, that have had color casts issues or artifacts, from too much pressure on the mechanical shutter release prior to exposure. The manual for a CFV even mentions this anomaly . It's more common in the mechanical cameras because of the way they're triggered, but a faulty shutter or electronic component in this area for any camera could do the same, but given that only part of the image is corrupt, i'm not so sure.
A dark frame is usually taken with long exposures, a 10 min. exposure= a 10 minute dark frame to allow the DB to remove noise, so not sure about that. Have you tried to tether or download images with the CF in the camera? One interesting thing noted by Graham is the fact that the color cast shows up in the brighter areas. It's almost flare-like in it's appearance. Also, watch the status light on the DB for unusually long or short write times after capture.
Last edited: