
#Hero10 black bones mod#
Max Lens Mod will keep the horizon locked, stabilization level and your content looking crisp.
#Hero10 black bones full#
With Max HyperSmooth + Horizon Lock you can spin the camera a full 360˚ and the horizon stays 100% level the entire time. HERO10 Black has horizon leveling built in with the Linear + Horizon Leveling digital lens, but this has a limitation tilt of 45˚. To build upon our SuperView focus, Max Lens Mod unleashes the widest, most immersive 155˚ field of view ever on a HERO camera with Max SuperView AND unlocks Max HyperSmooth stabilization with an incredible 360˚ horizon lock. For those not familiar, Max Lens Mod is a physical lens (sold separate) that you swap onto the camera itself to max out your stabilization, field of view and creativity. We first introduced Max Lens Mod in 2020 with HERO9 Black, and thanks to having almost identical formfactors, it’s now coming to HERO10 Black, too. And, it’s not just coming to 30fps, but to 60fps, too! The amount of horsepower it takes to pull that off is absurd, but luckily HERO10 Black with the new GP2 processor has the ponies to pull it off. SuperView has been an integral part of GoPro cameras for years, but this is the first time it’s been available in our highest resolution: 5.3K.
#Hero10 black bones pro#
PRO TIP: SuperView is amazing for getting the most visual contest in POV shots, but it also turns over some awesome, creative shots from selfie sticks, the nose of your surfboard and other mounting angles that put you close to the camera. So, SuperView does it all for you-in camera! It uses the whole sensor-capturing your handlebars, the trail ahead AND the tree line above- and delivers it in a 16:9 output using an algorithm to ensure that it doesn’t look distorted. Now, you could shoot in a 4:3 mode and then manually edit into a 16:9 format in post, but frankly, it’s really hard to pull that off. This lost context is what makes your POV more compelling. If you shoot in 16:9, you won’t see much of the front wheel or the trail ahead, and if you do, you’ll almost certainly lose the treetops and sky, making the video feel boxed-in.

One of the best examples for SuperView is mountain biking with your camera mounted on a Chesty. So, cameras generally crop the top and bottom of a 4:3 shot to make it 16:9, but that’s not great for action and movement in footage-enter, GoPro and SuperView.
#Hero10 black bones tv#
(If it does, feel free to read ahead ya SuperView super user!) The image sensor on essentially all cameras has a 4:3 ratio, but most of the videos we shoot (especially if intended for a modern TV or screen) will be in the wider, more horizontal 16:9 ratio. If that doesn’t make sense, let’s back track a bit. the whole camera sensor) and delivers it in a 16:9 format.

SuperView takes a 4:3 aspect ratio frame (a.k.a. SuperView, for those of you who don’t know, is one of our most immersive digital lens options. It’ll set you back $549.98 without a GoPro subscription, or $399.98 with one.This one has been high on our wish list for a long time, and Santa’s bringing it a couple weeks early. The purpose built FPV camera is available exclusively from, currently in the US only. This reveal of the Hero10 Black Bones comes shortly after the announcement of the GoPro Volta, which is all about adding more, rather than stripping down. If you don’t want to use the GoPro app or optional remote, you can wire it up to your drone controller. Supposedly, you can simply “solder into the battery leads of your drone and it’ll work just fine.” The theme of ease is continued when it comes to the controls. The built-in regulator circuit means you can use it without worrying about how much voltage your LiPo is supplying.

Getting comfortable soldering is definitely advantageous with this neat camera. Considering the consumer the Hero10 Black Bones is aimed at, Lema stated “customers for this product aren’t going to shy away from a soldering station attaching motors and control circuitry is how they build their drones to begin with.”

A camera that can take of unique vertical shots, without compromising on image quality. Recognising that FPV is becoming an important perspective for filmmakers, GoPro wanted to create a camera that ticked all the right boxes. The bare-bones camera weighs in at just 54 grams, compared to the Hero10’s 153 grams. The changes come by way of the newly ventilated casing, preventing any overheating issues. Solving this problem, the Hero10 Black Bones brings all the goodness of a Hero10 – sensor, lens, processor, and HyperSmooth built-in stabilization software. Lema went on to say that some pilots were even cutting their GoPro cameras in half in order to make them lighter and more compatible with drones. Speaking about videos like the bowling alley one-take wonder, GoPro’s head of product, Pablo Lema told The Verge, “those are all done by people who took the time to try to make a GoPro lighter”.
