Trig's said:iirc Kevshore does - iirc again he has posted about the combo as well - but I dont have the links to them thou so maybe worth dropping him a line an asking.... Thats if he hasn't replied before hand..
I've got them and used them for an air show with great results. In fact the shots are now with my stock library. Superb kit.
jacobs had them for £408 delivered,grays wouldnt price match so i asked fixation who did match the price.
i went with them as a big dealer and barry their technician is very good.
wait till tommorow and i may have some thoughts on it.

There's lots of ifs and buts with using a 2x TC and whilst I don't doubt that the new one is much better than the old one, you will ultimately be having the same issues as using the 1.7x, only half a stop less light to play with.
If you look at the people who are getting good results you'll see most have equipment that can cope with loosing 2 stops of light and maintaining high shutter speeds still - which is all about high ISO capability...
Think carefully about the 2x, its simply not the magic bullet you might think it is, although the new one is better, it still has the same pitfalls as the old one because nothing can fix physics ;-)

Oh well, don't forget the golden rule of not shooting it wide open - if you start with a f2.8 lens, you will be down to f5.6 when you add the 2x, then add set your exposure for a further two stops further down - should be sweet around the f9/f10 mark.
If shutter speed is important in your shot, use manual mode with auto ISO, then you can control aperture and shutter speed manually and still get automatic results... thats my top tip for Nikon TC use ;-)
Here's a 100% crop from a shot (sooc) with the VRI + TC 2.0 III at 5000 iso in very poor light, looking at my reflection.....

Self portrait I see then Graham
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edit: Yes I edited your quote to what it should've been by the way![]()
