>>3836492>It will exaggerate movement, but in a motion-blur way, not in a rolling-shutter way.Also in a rolling shutter way, if you move the camera along as if you were panning, either accidentally or on purpose.
Or if the little cage thing was moving like a pendulum due to wind.
>You'd have to be shooting over 1/4000th for the electronic shutter to even kick in (unless you set it to ES mode manually), so the motion blur from a long lens almost certainly wouldn't be an issue.Shutter speed doesn't matter.
Once you use an electronic shutter, the readout speed is, say, 1/125 (or worse, I don't know) and it doesn't change regardless of effective shutter speed. So no matter what shutter speed you choose, the rolling shutter will be as if you were shooting at 1/125.
This is for normal (focal plane) shutters as well.
You can get an idea of rolling shutter by max flash sync speed. Your "rolling shutter" effect is defined by your cameras max sync speed.
Same for electronic shutter, if the manufacturer gives a spec for max sync speed with electronic shutter, check that and this will give you an idea of the amount of rolling shutter you'll get.