Hello there,
I own a D750 and am about to pull the trigger on a D3. Good deal, can't say no. 'Need' the second body.
Now, for sports and wildlife how would you pair the 2 up, would you balance the low light performance of each, increasing the crop ability with the D750 pixel count. Or dedicate a low light partnership and an open area one.
A couple of scenarios here which need also to take in the 6.5 FPS compared to the 9 FPS. Of course I can't hold 2 cameras at once (reliably).
Woodland walk, with 50% of time spent under the cover of the trees, and 50% open area (plenty of light) shooting birds, deer and anything of interest in the distance.
Trackside(motorsport), where the combination of focal lengths are useful, sunny at best, overcast and glum at worst.
Thoughts?
Just wanted to spark a topic and also look for some advice/opinions. Of course I will be using these and come to myself own conclusion but be good to hear other people's thoughts.
Cheers for reading.
Earl.
I own a D750 and am about to pull the trigger on a D3. Good deal, can't say no. 'Need' the second body.
Now, for sports and wildlife how would you pair the 2 up, would you balance the low light performance of each, increasing the crop ability with the D750 pixel count. Or dedicate a low light partnership and an open area one.
A couple of scenarios here which need also to take in the 6.5 FPS compared to the 9 FPS. Of course I can't hold 2 cameras at once (reliably).
Woodland walk, with 50% of time spent under the cover of the trees, and 50% open area (plenty of light) shooting birds, deer and anything of interest in the distance.
Trackside(motorsport), where the combination of focal lengths are useful, sunny at best, overcast and glum at worst.
Thoughts?
Just wanted to spark a topic and also look for some advice/opinions. Of course I will be using these and come to myself own conclusion but be good to hear other people's thoughts.
Cheers for reading.
Earl.