Hi Bunkerbaz,
In fact, shutter speed doesn't affect how you can slow down motion in your videos. It affects image chip exposure with light in combination with the aperture setting while recording.
What does affect how you can slow down motion in your videos is frame rate. Fifty frames per second is derived from the Europeam TV standard, PAL (Phase Alternating Line). This, or NTSC-derived 60 fps, is generally the frame rate you will probably want to produce your videos at.
Your question may thus be what maximum frame rate PowerDirector can handle in the input footage to see if you can use a camera recording at such a frame rate or get such footage. I have no personal experience with such footage but I think PowerDirector should be able to handle 120 fps or even 240 fps. Slow motion from footage at such frame rates should be visibly better than from a standard TV frame rate camera.
Regards…
Jirka
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at Feb 19. 2016 05:10