Why does Program mode choose different shutter speeds with electronic vs mechanical shutter on the Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark II?

Asked 7/9/2019

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On my Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark II, Program mode seems to pick about 1/125 s with the mechanical shutter, but around 1/30 s with the electronic shutter under similar conditions. Is there a technical reason for this, or is it just how Olympus tuned Program mode?

Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

Photography Stack Exchange contributor

7y ago

2 Answers

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Yes, there is a very valid reason.

Mirrorless cameras typically have an electronic first shutter curtain and a choice between electronic and mechanical shutter for the second curtain.

First, you should understand how a traditional mechanical shutter works. In the beginning, the sensor is covered by the first curtain. The first curtain starts to move down, exposing the sensor. Then the second shutter curtain starts to move, hiding the sensor. There is a maximum speed the shutter curtains can move. The flash sync speed of a camera is the fastest shutter speed where the first curtain is completely down yet the second curtain has not yet started to move. Faster speeds have a small moving slit moving down over the sensor.

Obligatory video

Now, how could you make the shutter curtain electronic?

The first curtain is easy. The CMOS sensor pixels have a reset line. If the reset line of a particular sensor pixel is active, the pixel does not accumulate any charge from arriving photons. Release that reset line and the pixel starts accumulating charge. It is very easy to row-by-row deactivate the reset in a manner that you have a quickly moving electronic curtain through the sensor. The speed of the virtual electronic curtain has to match the speed of the second curtain.

However, doing the second curtain electronically is harder. There is no way to electronically make pixels not accumulate any more charge from arriving photons, apart from reactivating the reset line which destroys any accumulated charge. So, the only option is to just start reading the sensor pixels. Now, reading the sensor pixels is slow. If your camera is capable of high-resolution video capture at 30 Hz, the readout speed is probably around 1/30 seconds.

In contrast, a mechanical curtain can very quickly cover the entire sensor, allowing you to read it at whatever speed you're capable of in no hurry, without pixels accumulating any more charge.

So, the electronic second curtain is made by reading the sensor, which is slow. To match that, the first curtain has to be equally slow. You can have fast shutter speeds with slowly moving shutter curtains, but then you will have a rolling shutter effect.

My guess is that Olympus wanted to avoid the horrible rolling shutter with electronic second curtain shutter and replaced it instead with motion blur, directing the photographer to use instead the mechanical shutter when photographing fast action.

If you want to test the theory, try taking a photograph of something that is very quickly moving, such as a car. Do it first with mechanical second curtain shutter and then with electronic second curtain shutter. I'm sure if you use a fast shutter speed, you'll note the electronic second curtain shutter has a horrible rolling shutter effect.

Could you make a good fast electronic shutter curtain? Yes, you could. It requires changes to every single pixel of the sensor. By making the pixels more complex, you would:

  • Reduce their ability to collect light
  • Make them more expensive
  • Possibly reduce the number of pixels

One solution is a device where every second row has pixels sensitive to light, and every other row has pixels that are used merely for temporary charge storage. This approach loses half of the light collecting ability of the sensor, and half of the resolution of the sensor, while being more expensive at the same time.

Originally by user81735. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

user81735

6y ago

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AI Answer

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There is likely a technical reason, not just an arbitrary choice. With a mechanical shutter, exposure is controlled by moving shutter curtains. With an electronic shutter, the sensor is read electronically, and that can interact differently with scene motion and artificial lighting.

A common reason for slower shutter choices with electronic shutter is to reduce the risk of banding/flicker under mains-powered lighting. Artificial lights often pulse at 50/60 Hz, and shutter speeds such as 1/30 s can average over more of that cycle than faster speeds like 1/125 s, making exposure more even.

Electronic shutters can also behave differently from mechanical shutters because the whole sensor is not always captured at exactly the same instant, which can affect how motion and some light sources render. Camera makers may therefore bias Program mode toward “safer” shutter speeds when electronic shutter is enabled.

So yes: the camera is probably intentionally choosing different default shutter speeds because electronic and mechanical shutter modes have different practical limitations, especially with flicker and motion.

UniqueBot

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7y ago

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