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- Name
- Gary
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D800, Nikon 70-200mm VR MKII @f/2.8
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Sorry mate.Fracster, Bastic, please stop! I haven't really got a spare £2000 at the mo, and your shots aren't helping me!![]()

Arggghh....h This mooring I talked myself out of the D800 and back in to the D600 but I love the detail in those shots.
Sorry mate.
I thought long and hard about the D800, my self justification is that it makes my 500mm a hell of a lot longer than a 600mm due to the ability to crop in so heavily,so,in fact, I saved myself money.
The misses just gave that "stop talking crap" look...........![]()
I sold some stuff that I very rarely used or would stop using to pretty much fund mine.The 'Stop talking crap look' is the look i was most scared of too....even with some creative accountancy! And my father in law frequents TP too and doubt he would grass!!![]()
I did same when buying mine. Sold all my Dx gear. I was lucky enough to receive a fair bit of cash back from something long overdue also, and happened to get a few portrait jobs and gigs all at once. I still had to add to buy lenses to go with, but having a bit to start with softens the blow.
Fracster, its funny you mention a d300 and grip. I have exactly that combo that could go. The problem is, ive already given those to swmbo! I could sell my d3s to buy the d800 and then no problem, but im concerned i would miss the versatility of my current cam, as gramps mentioned.
Im no way good enough cagey for pro work. I love my photography, but completely amateur status so i can maintain my olympics eligibility!![]()
I'm not a pro either![]()
Cheers, pretty much full frame withthe 300 F4 and 1.4 tc.
But, I have the exact same settings in both my 700 and 800, the 700 is superb, the 800 is worse. I have tried upping the shutter speed to 1/4000 and above, but I just cannot get birds in flight right with it. It must be something that I am doing wrong, the lenses are fine, the bodies are,unless I have missed something new to the D800.
I have tried single point focus,9 and 21 point, it just does not deliver in flight shots like the 700.
I`ll keep practising and trialling new settings,i`ll get there.
Spot the sparrowhawk!
well it was with a 24mm f1.4!!!!
Useless I know ... but it does show the crop-ability![]()
Sorry mate. I thought that your gig work helped pay for the 'beast'.![]()
I have done the odd paid gig aye - Have shot some album covers and covered gigs for local bands. As well as some family portraits. It's not regular enough to be pro-work and it never pays a whole lot. But it all adds up.
I was desperately disappointed at failing to get any blue tit shots sharp yesterday. Only tried a few today and they were no better, but I am working with a D of F of about 2 cms so that is a big drawback.
However, I tried 3D focussing today on larger birds in flight that just happened by the house and got about 90% success rate.
Camera set to AF-C
In CSM:-
set a1 to Release
set a4 to AF-ON
Set focus preference to Dynamic (I am using 21 focus points).
I hold in the AF-ON button whist tracking and shooting (you could leave focus and shutter release on the default button I suppose).
In Dynamic. the focus point in use jumps about in the viewfinder which is initially distracting, but it can be ignored.
Funny thing is that aircraft passing 3000 ft overhead at about 180 kts.never seem to produce any unsharp shots no matter what focussing method is used.
Small birds in flight are a problem for me, but to be fair they always were with previous cameras too.
D800, Nikon 70-200mm VR MKII @f/2.8
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Thanks for that info. Indeed this is not such a big difference. Saves a lot of money indeed...the Pro... reads at 94MB/sec using the same 50MB test.
Edit just reread your comments, I'm intrigued now as to 3d tracking on the D800 as I've never ever got on with it on my D3s
I have been having problems with my shots not being quite sharpe, so decided to use a higher iso to increase the shutter speed.
So should I leave the sensitivity on Auto or Off and hope that my setting is good.
Think you need to know whether camera shake or out of focus is the problem.
Stick the ISO on Auto and shoot with a high shutter speed and you'll rule out camera shake.
What have you been photographing that is not sharp ? Did you photograph the same sort of subject with another camera before getting a D800 and, if so, were these shots sharp ?
I was taking shots of all sorts whilst on holiday. I tried the camera on a tripod on flowers in the garden and the shots were very crisp using 200 ISO.
....... check your technique (http://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tutorials/camera-shake.htm)
..
Sounds like camera shake was your problem when handholding the camera, Peter. Need to think about higher shutter speeds / check your technique (http://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tutorials/camera-shake.htm).
I don't want to carry a tripod everywhere, but if there is a dyke or fence etc. handy I use it. I carry a piece of bubble wrap with me to put between the camera and whatever I rest it on.
"Take three shots in rapid succession" - that's a good tip.
Still to try that. Control of breathing in the way suggested in the article definately steadies you up. Some of the shooting fraternity on here probably use that too when aiming.
WOW, thats still a rip offTHIS is a very good alternative to Kirk and considerably cheaper.
WOW, thats still a rip off