robertwgross wrote:
Mirror slap is only a potential problem at a certain range of shutter speeds. You will get different opinions, but it is generally from about 1/4 to maybe 1/20 second. It can be just a little vibration that causes your image to be just slightly fuzzy despite the camera being on a tripod.
Why that range only?
Anything faster (like 1/30), and the mirror slap happens after the end of the shutter, so it doesn't matter.
Anything slower (like 1/2), and the mirror slap PERIOD is only a small portion of the total shutter PERIOD, so it doesn't contribute much.
But, in that narrow PERIOD, the mirror slap can be significant. Some cameras are worse than others, but just about all SLR cameras have it to some degree. You would not shoot anything this slow without a tripod, would you?
---Bob Gross---
Hey Bob,
Most of the time I agree with what you say...however....this time I'm not so sure. The way I understand the sequence of events (mechanicals only, this does not include the light readings, TTL or ETTL sensing, etc.) is this:
1.) User presses shutter button
2) mirror flops up out of the way
3) lens stops down
4) shutter fires
5) lens stops back up
6) mirror flops back down
(two and three are actually simultaneous, or nearly so, as are 5 and 6.
Number 2 in the sequence is where the vibration we are concerned about is induced. The problem is that the camera may still be vibrating slightly for a half-second or so after the mirror flops up, which is during the time of the shutter firing at all shutter speeds. So, I would think that it would certainly affect the image at any shutter speed that is slower than about 1/500 or so where the shutter speed is fast enough to actually "freeze" the vibration. I know that's true with my Medium Format cameras...the mirror is like a darned earthquake on those things. I would think the sequence would be the same on a Drebel or 10D. The mirror has to be out of the way before the shutter fires.
Is my thinking screwed up here?