Ssis-903 4k May 2026

While standard releases often run at 29.97 fps, 4K remasters of this caliber frequently support 50 or 60 fps (depending on the region). The result is fluid panning shots and natural motion without the "soap opera effect" that plagues lower-quality upscaling.

  • Outputs: configure SRT caller mode to remote aggregator (fallback to RTMP to CDN if SRT fails).
  • Monitoring: enable per-stream CPU/GPU usage alarms and set retry/backoff on network drop.

  • Owning the file or stream is only half the battle. To appreciate SSIS-903 4K, your viewing chain must be competent. SSIS-903 4K

    Q1. Can I record 4K at 60 fps?
    Answer: The SSIS‑903’s native sensor and processing engine are limited to 4K / 30 p (or 24 p/25 p). For 60 fps you must drop to 1080 p, where the camera can run up to 120 fps (or 240 fps with a firmware‑enabled high‑speed mode). While standard releases often run at 29

    Q2. Does the camera support 10‑bit internal recording?
    Answer: Internally it records 8‑bit 4:2:0. However, the HDMI output can deliver 10‑bit 4:2:2 to an external recorder (e.g., Atomos Ninja V), giving you a 10‑bit workflow without the extra cost of an internal codec. Outputs: configure SRT caller mode to remote aggregator

    Q3. How much storage does 4K 30 p All‑Intra consume?
    Answer: Approx. 150 GB per hour at 300 Mbps. Plan for at least 2 × 128 GB cards per hour of shooting (dual‑recording doubles the consumption).

    Q4. Can I use the camera as a webcam?
    Answer: Yes. Use the HDMI clean output into a capture device (Elgato Cam Link 4K, Blackmagic Capture HDMI). Set the camera to HD / 30 p for smooth video, and disable OIS to avoid “jitter” in a static desktop setup.

    Q5. Is the ND filter variable?
    Answer: No, it’s a step‑filter with three fixed densities (ND 0.6, 0.9, 1.2). Switch via the dedicated ND button.