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p.1 #14 · Which camera body can do this? | |
vkalia wrote:
However, I find that IS helps even on a tripod, especially if you are shooting with the head not fully locked down. That is the case with my 500/4 and TCs, and that is the case with the scope. Even on the sturdiest tripod, IS can make an improvement outdoors. I realize that in-body IS will not be as useful on a scope as it is on a shorter lens, but it is better than nothing and certainly will not hurt.
I don't want to call you wrong, because experience always trumps theory, but I can lay out some reasons which might cause you to second guess your requirement for in-body IS. The first and most fundamental concern is that the accelerometers that the IS system uses to determine what it must do are located in the body only. Rather than seeing pitch and yaw, as rotations occurring close to the body will produce, the sensors will instead see lateral shifts, as the lens rotates across its relatively distant gimbal point. Without knowledge about where the axis of ration lies (now at the balance point of the system, rather than near or even behind the body as in hand held use) the system will make bad decisions about how far to move the sensor. As far as I can see, it could only be luck that allows the system to have a consistently positive effect when used this way.
The other issue is that the type of vibration found on when mounted on a tripod is significantly different from the kind humans generate. Unlike human induced pitch and yaw, which sways back and forth about an average position as the photographer maintains framing, a locked down tripod shows resonant vibration at much higher frequencies (tens to hundreds of Hz rather than Hz to tens of Hz). Rather than carrying the sensor in only a single direction through a whole exposure, the IS system may be called upon to repeatedly correct and come back, without under or overshoot. This is an extremely demanding task - the system would have to maintain a running history of how long the vibrations were in order to get ahead of them during the exposure. I've not experimented with Sony or Pentax's implementations, but I'd be surprised if any IS systems manage this feat.
Even with gimbals relaxed and resonant vibration at a minimum, typical digiscoping focal lengths are quite extreme relative to the amount of correction sensor shake style IS can provide. The sensor will quickly run out of travel.
vkalia wrote:
And mainly, I would like focus confirmation. Again, it may be hit or miss, but it is better than nothing. At the shutter speeds/relatively high EVs in which I will be using the scope for shooting wildlife, I dont think there will be problem getting focus confirmation (or so I hope, anyway).
You're probably correct that focus priority is better than nothing, but you have to bear in mind that an 85mm scope combines narrow DOF (comparable to a 85mm f/1.2 lens) with a speed (f/7) where parallax based AF systems are running out of steam. It's a very demanding task you're asking of any body, and I think you'll be disappointed if you base your choice on this feature working reliably. Mirror-less "EVIL" cameras might be better adapted to this task, where the viewfinder could highlight high contrast edge transitions while maintaining a full frame view.
vkalia wrote:
I have a Televue 85 and 2" extension tubes, barlow and T-adapter. Works quite well and provides magnifications far greater than what I have gotten so far.
Unless your quarry is both torpid and demanding of every last bit of focal length you can muster, you might be happier swapping the barlow for a focal reducer / flattener. Even if you only get a mild reduction (0.8x) the flatter field should expose itself positively in the corners of an APS sensor, and the higher shutter speeds and closer to diffraction matched resolution should allow cropping to deliver just a much detail on the subject.
vkalia wrote:
Nice photo of the longspur, btw. Excellent detail... that's the Nikon ED80, you said? I have the ED50 which I use as a portable scope and ever since I got it, my Pentax 65 hardly sees the light of the day. Am thinking of selling the Pentax and getting an 80mm scope for those low-light days. The ED80 may be the one (or the Pentax 80).
That shot was with the humble Skywatcher 80mm f/7.5 (1200mm EFL) and a modified survey tripod, live view focus, and patient bird.
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