![warp stabilizer resolve warp stabilizer resolve](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/0SqHvu_UMYs/maxresdefault.jpg)
If you look at hand held footage you can see the three dimensional, almost ball joint effect the camera has because it can rotate, tip forward and back and bump up and down/left to right when walking, a gimbal removes most of this three dimensional movement and by correcting left to right/tip up and down movements, the only movements it has slight issues with, or more accurately are the movements you have some control over is the X and Y Position, so have the software analyse this for correction, i think you'll find its a little better but it is a shot by shot basisGreat advice! You obviously have a lot of experience using Warp Stabilizer. I would try turning these off and see how good you can get Position stabilisation to work, this is purely the two dimensional X and Y Axis (or up and down) which is the main things wrong with some Gimbal shots (the up and down from running and slight left to right).
![warp stabilizer resolve warp stabilizer resolve](https://www.4kshooters.net/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/030_ResolveStable.mp4.00_01_21_18.Still003-1.jpg)
If you look at hand held footage you can see the three dimensional, almost ball joint effect the camera has because it can rotate, tip forward and back and bump up and down/left to right when walking, a gimbal removes most of this three dimensional movement and by correcting left to right/tip up and down movements, the only movements it has slight issues with, or more accurately are the movements you have some control over is the X and Y Position, so have the software analyse this for correction, i think you'll find its a little better but it is a shot by shot basis
![warp stabilizer resolve warp stabilizer resolve](https://www.toolfarm.com/images/uploads/blog/ppro_warpstabilizer_tut.jpg)
Rotation affects the roll and i find is best used for longer lens shots because wide angle lenses have a certain amount of distortion based on perspective and if that isn't maintained you get this kind of cork screw/listing effect to footage, with longer lenses the distortion is reduced and rotation works better. Scaling affects how much the image appears to enlarge which with a walk/running gimbal shot is each and every frame and that can cause pulsing (Warping) footage. Have you guys tried Warp with the specific settings you need?