TeeJay626 wrote:
I've been on the fence with the RF 600 f11. I'm an enthusiast wildlife shooter and my primary camera is the R7, while I also have a R10. I have the RF 100-400 as well as my trusty EF 70-300 nano USM II.
I got the 600 a little while ago and have had mixed results.
960mm (equiv) puts this combo in an entirely different class (of difficulty). Generally speaking, your approach needs to account for that.
It does poorly with BIF
The sample you posted has a shutter speed well below what I would personally recommend for that focal length (4x the equiv focal length is a good rule of thumb).
You don’t mention anything about your AF settings. For BIFs I really like Eye AF with “Auto Initial” and Case 2 with "Tracking sensitivity" set all the way to ( - ), and "Accel./decel. tracking" set all the way to ( + ). "Switching tracked subjects" all the way to ( 0 ).
I would also turn IS off for BIFs (I get higher keeper rates with it off).
If you have a filter on the lens, remove it. Also watch for the temperature layer that can set up within your lens hood. My hood has a port in the bottom of it which I keep open at all times.
and farther away subjects,
Is it the AF accuracy or the IQ? Mech shutter or electronic? What are your image settings? What do you use for software? Do you shoot bursts?
but closer subjects it seems to be good.
That means your lens is likely not defective.
It also seems to suffer more from heatwaves than my 100-400 on subjects at the same distance.
Longer focal lengths magnify heat waves too. Atmospherics can ruin the whole day.
Anyway, here are a few test shots from earlier this week at my local wildlife refuge. I'm not really that happy with it overall, but I think more testing is needed. C&C welcome.
My (maximum) optimal focal length for birding is about 800mm equiv. I’m currently shooting at 700mm (on FF). It works great for BIFs (for me). Anything much longer than that and things get a lot more tricky (very quickly). Remember that Canon itself classifies anything 400mm and above as “Super Telephoto.” You have to treat things accordingly. Your technique and settings (and shooting situations) have to be close to perfect.
I would suspect that improvements could be made on all threee fronts. Pick away at each phase and your success rate should climb steadily.
Best of luck to you!
R2