Showing posts with label 1033. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1033. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Low Light Photography

Shooting moving trains in low light is difficult. If they weren't moving, you could put the camera on a tripod and use a long shutter speed to good effect. However, their motion demands a fairly quick shutter speed to capture the train without blurring. The only other option is to use a bank of lights, such as O. Winston Link used to use and Gary Knapp does now, but for most of us that is not an option.

I shot a very long eastbound intermodal train at Eldon siding near Banff, Alberta on August 7. This train had CEFX 1041 and a CP unit leading (CP 9467 I believe), then CEFX 1033 a ways down, then CP 9516 down farther, then CP 9553 near the end of the train. Three separate DPU units!

I shot it at 6:20 AM, before sunrise, in the woods, so there was not much light available. Here are the different units and the techniques I used to try to get some kind of usable photo.

Here's the head end, shot with default settings (F/3.5, 1/25s, ISO 3200). As you can see, it is impossible to read the unit number. The shutter speed was too slow.
CEFX 1041
For the next unit, CEFX 1033, I elected to pan the train and see if that would bring some portion of it into focus. I think it worked out OK for the unit number (F/5.6, 1/40s, ISO 1600).
CEFX 1033
I tried basically the same technique with CP 9516. The results weren't quite as good but they were OK (F/5.6, 1/32s, ISO 1600).
CP 9516 at Eldon, Alberta
After that, I overrode the shutter speed to see what that would do. The picture was fairly sharp but very very dark. I did a lot of processing on this photo to get it to this state (F/3.5, 1/250s, ISO 1600).
CP 9533 at Eldon
Clearly selecting a lower shutter speed and panning produces better results.

Why was I at Eldon siding in Alberta? Those who follow me on Twitter know I was heading to Morant's Curve. More about that later.