Re: Extremely Sharp -- TC Use knocks off a star
3
TimP111 wrote:
tbh you can argue if you are mounting the TC for what your doing then you are probably looking for more reach anyway and the fact you cant zoom back all the way isnt really a disadvantage
TBH, many subjects are dynamic in their distance from the camera. Let's say when shooing outdoor sports or, in my case, airplanes. In these cases, the lack of zoom range is a serious handicap.
The pictures below are from a test run I made of a small airshow before a major airshow.
The first picture below is at 700mm. Note this is with a very large plane with a wingspan more than 2x that of a small fighter plane.
700mm at the start of the takeoff run
Now, as the plane passed by zoomed all the way out to 420mm
As the plane passes by at 420mm
Then you have mixes of planes flying in various directions and distances and formations of multiple airplanes. It turns out that 140 to 700 would have been a nearly ideal zoom range most of the time. At 700mm, I could isolate a single plane or better capture planes further away. Based on these and other tests, I gave up on using the TC. Using the TC meant giving up too many shots as the plane(s) approached.
So you just crop, right? Well, below is a smaller plane at 700mm. I would already be cropping the 700mm shot. There would not be much left at 500mm.
Smaller plane landing at 700mm
Because of the time and risk of damage, it is impractical to change out the TC.
At the big airshow, I ended up using the RF100-500 on the R5 and my RF24-240 on my RP backup camera to catch planes that were taxiing close by where I needed less than 100mm, sometimes a lot less. The 1.4X TC stayed in my bag after trying it for a few shots.