all digital pics blurry


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i have a sony DSC-P72 digi cam, 3.2mp. went to a football game today and took around 20 images. when i got home almost all of my images were blurry beyond hell. the specs for the dhutter speed were Automatic: 2 seconds to 1/2000 second. but when i got home i messed with it more and tried alot of different settings, and the most i got was 1/125 even shakig it around, taking pics of case fans at 2600rpm that kind of stuff.... i mean at 1/125 only way that was achieviable was putting the camera 5 inches from the fan... so how the hell do you get 1/2000 on the thing? what do you have to do in order to get it to work?

its a auto camera but still

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you don't get shutter speeds of around 1/2000 unless you are outside on a very sunny day.

the average person can hold a camera steady to about 1/60 of a second.

if the shutter was in the 1/4 to 1/30 of a second range your hand has to be very steady to hold it without it getting blurry. i think most likely the camera wasn't in focus since you said most were a shutter of 1/125.

that's the f-stop (aperature.) it's the amount of light that it lets enter the camera to take the pic.

and i think he means macro mode. it is used to take closeups. it's normally shown with a flower on most cameras

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one of the reviews i read i saw this

Format: JPEG Aperture: f5.6

Exposure: Auto Shutter Speed: 1/500 sec.

Res: 2048 x 1536 Flash: Off

Quality: Fine ISO: 100

File Size: 1.41MB Focal Lgth: 39mm (35mm Eq.)

so they got 1/500 of just takin a pic of a building....

ok? what about it?

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i was takin pics of a moving thing and getting 1/10th that (the football players) or cars moving by...

interesting thing. turned on flash, went outside took a pic, and it wasnt blurry... even though the object was well over 60 feet away.... whats up with that?

Low Light conditions would have caused your blurry pics - your camera would have automatically compensated the shutter speed to match your ISO level and low light - if it hadn't of increased the shutter speed, then you would have got very very faint pictures that were underexposed.

When using flash, obviously there is a huge amount of light available, therefore a lower shutter speed is needed - hence no blur.

Low Light conditions would have caused your blurry pics - your camera would have automatically compensated the shutter speed to match your ISO level and low light - if it hadn't of increased the shutter speed, then you would have got very very faint pictures that were underexposed.

When using flash, obviously there is a huge amount of light available, therefore a lower shutter speed is needed - hence no blur.

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but i just was outside in full daylight (well it is cloudy) and the moving car was at least 60 feet away so it wouldnt get any of the light.... would it?

Cloudy conditions breed bad light.

As for using flash, again, it lowers the shutter speed - even if none of the flash reached the car, it would have still 'frozen' the action of the car moving due to the low shutter speed. I'll bet the pic of the car was a bit underexposed, yeah?

Faster = better for sports

Slower = Better for low light conditions

Unfortunately the down side of automatic cameras is that they tend to compensate for a lack of light and ignore the fact that blurry pics come too easily.

Perhaps your ISO level was a bit too low?

but i just was outside in full daylight (well it is cloudy) and the moving car was at least 60 feet away so it wouldnt get any of the light.... would it?

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when you have the flash on, almost ALL cameras with set the shutter speed to 1/125 (at least they should anyway) only because if you dont have it there and the film speed is faster than 1/125 it will have a giant black spot on the image.

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