Pherdinand
the snow must go on
Ostrich doesn't fly.
🙄
🙄
Hi
In fact even a slightly off focus good shot is better than a perfectly focussed but uninspiring one.
Richard
You miss understandWhy do you assume it is not possible to frame an interesting shot with an auto focus camera? Out of focus is simply out of focus and will always be sent to the trash can. I find many times I want to take a photo, I have to grab the camera, point and shoot, I don't have time to worry about ASA, White balance, Exposure.
Hi Thanks😉
me miss-understand its my middle name.
i did wonder about the test, but it was too technical for me .. 1/2 a stop and 10mm spots ..
btw I knew an Olga if that counts .. but i'd not like to comment on if she was used ..
'Most shots' in focus is missing the point.
Id spend the time with the 75 lux getting a killer shot in a relaxed and unhurried manner with a nice natural composition whilst the competition was farting around with autofocus motor drive fill flash autowhite ballancing exposure bracketing....oops in the wrong mode does my lens hood look big in this ......etc.yeh bring it on!
If you use the same shooting methods with RF and autofocus then I assume you are not focusing the rangefinder as you have to move the focus ring with your hand. No wonder you get more keepers with the Canon😛. Seriously though its not a great challenge that you are setting.No, it IS the point when you're trying to get shots in focus. 🙂
Cliches.
I use RF's and SLR's side by side, and I use the roughly the same shooting methods with each. My experience has been that fast, long focal length lenses is where RF cameras are at a decided disadvantage to SLR's. I had both a 75 'lux and a 90 Summicron, and neither one was equal to the Canon EF 85/1.2 in real world shooting in terms of delivering "keepers."
You shouldn't be afraid to say what you think, really😀
jaapv is a dentist and I think he has been at the laughing gas 😉
To be honest, I can't even see the eye of a bird in flight let alone focus on it - unless it was an ostrich or something similar.
Are you for real?
You can manually focus on the eye of a bird in flight? Nothing on your website to suggest that.
And a DSLR has more shutter lag than a manual SLR? Comparing which to which?
Whatever you're taking, you should probably take less of it. Maybe these guys are your friends or something and don't want to be rude but you're just talking ****.
Clichees ... I use RF's and SLR's side by side, and I use the roughly the same shooting methods with each. My experience has been that fast, long focal length lenses is where RF cameras are at a decided disadvantage to SLR's. I had both a 75 'lux and a 90 Summicron, and neither one was equal to the Canon EF 85/1.2 in real world shooting in terms of delivering "keepers."
Yep.. just as I have hundreds of shots to prove otherwise.
Dave
Do you mean your manual shots are usually out of focus?😱😛
It seems that no matter what anyone else will state it will not change your mind Jaap (and to be honest, I don't know why anyone would want to change your mind...after all, you seem to be set in your ways 🙂 )
I think what some of the other folks here may want is for you (and some others who seem to be hell bent on never having the name "Leica" be sullied in any way, shape or form) to have a bit of an open mind to the fact that maybe, just maybe, there may be methods that work for them that are different than your own.
If there's one thing I've learned in my short life so far is that there are no "absolutes" per se.
Cheers,
Dave
Shooting birds gliding around is one thing.
Shooting a hummingbird that is moving and not hovering is another.
IR light barrier in front of a flower, camera and flash hooked up to the barrier, focus on a spot just in front of the barrier to compensate for the shutter delay and wait for a hummingbird to get hungry. If the camera has AF, switch it off, there is no way it can keep up with such a bird.
I've seen amazing shots done this way. There is a guy in Germany who has this setup over a pond in his backyard. His diving Kingfisher shots are beyond stunning. He does workshops too.
...and might be due to a combination of wrong camera, wrong technique and favorable environment for the Canon lens (let me guess: sunny 16 ? ). At 1/60th and below, your Canon lens (no stabilizer) is dead in the water without mono or tripod.