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Originally Posted by ajay_satpute
(Post 3829157)
I got the new 55-200 VR2 during the mega sale period in the last week. The MRP is 15,650/, but I got it for 8,600/-. |
Originally Posted by condor
(Post 3845974)
Very good deal ! Which site was it ? |
Originally Posted by M35
(Post 3845929)
Same here. A TC 14III is on order. Tried the lens with a 14E II in very bad light and was quite happy with the output. 700mm reach should help for perched birds. Awaiting some photos and log now :) |
Originally Posted by nilanjanray
(Post 3848031)
The 200-500mm is sharper than the Tamron, and AF is better. I have revised my opinion a bit. |
Originally Posted by nilanjanray
(Post 3848031)
A few (low res) photos here: http://www.dpreview.com/forums/thread/3926078 My keeper rate with the 200-500mm has been decent. Quirks exist, but one has to work around them. Once I buy something - a car or a camera or a lens, I ignore all the naysayers. Especially those who comment without first hand experience. One just has to work around the shortcomings, whether it is a Fortuner with average brakes or a f5.6 lens. |
Originally Posted by nilanjanray
(Post 3850457)
I try convincing myself that I will be happy with a higher resolution, slower body such as a D810 for wildlife shooting. And then I see photos such as this that make me drool: http://www.fredmiranda.com/forum/top...76/26#13293245 |
Originally Posted by M35
(Post 3850567)
It is the skill + patience and endurance, while being in a blind ! Even a D810 could handle such shots; a faster burst would help though. |
Originally Posted by nilanjanray
(Post 3850457)
I try convincing myself that I will be happy with a higher resolution, slower body such as a D810 for wildlife shooting. And then I see photos such as this that make me drool: http://www.fredmiranda.com/forum/top...76/26#13293245 Or a photo that captures the moment when a predator leaps onto the back of the prey. High FPS + big buffer, state of the art AF, and most important, fantastic action shooting skills, lodes of patience (takes many efforts to get one shot like that), and knowledge of the subject. |
Originally Posted by Speed Pujari
(Post 3854764)
That is my dream shot ! A kingfisher coming out of water with prey. There was another person from Bangalore Photography Club who took similar shot of Pied Kingfisher using his Nikon D4 and 500mm at Lalbagh Garden Blr. Apologies I do not have the link with me. This is a similar image which Canon used for its 1D MIV advertisement IIRC. High+big buffer is a great boon especially with 12 MP like D3s (I wanted one). But over time I have learnt that with high fps we tend to create lot of garbage and filtering it out is heck of a task. With D800, we use to be a little conservative while test clicking. My number of fps clicks has considerably reduced after moving from D300 (8fps) to D800 and for some reason it has compelled me to concentrate more on composition than clicking. |
Originally Posted by Aroy
(Post 3677021)
Now that Canon has bought Yongnu, we can expect a lot of budget flash systems to be available in India, with hope fully full warranty https://fstoplounge.com/2015/04/cano...brand-yongnuo/ |
Originally Posted by condor
(Post 3855916)
Has any one tried the Yongnuo flashes ? or is there any thing else that in similar range ? |
Originally Posted by nilanjanray
(Post 3854895)
It is not either or. Many of the top wildlife pros have combine a high FPS camera with a high res one. Different types of shots. |
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