Is that really a 55 T-Bird? It shouldn't have portholes. :smack:
I couldn't tell you.
Again I only had about 20-30 minutes to take shots (took about 200) of the car show and some of the cars were parked only 2-3 feet apart so I couldn't always move around to the "better" side for a shot. Unfortunately as I went up the street I was basically shooting into the sun so many shots have lens flare. Going back down the other side was better, lighting wise, but more of the "cool" cars were on the "wrong" side of the street.
I wish I had more time to take better shots and maybe talk with car owner(s). I was shooting to capture some images of cars vs taking a "great" photo. At least I squatted down low to get a street level perspective.
This guy on another forum I visit bought this lens and seems to be happy.
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The workflow, mainly. Secondarily checking if I can get YouTube to recognize the file as 4k@60.
That one, after being online for more than 12 hours, offered a 4k version. No idea how long before (if?) the 4k60 will show up.
So your source material prior to uploading was 4K@60? I checked mine after a week and still no 4K render was offered from YouTube...
I've sen other YouTube videos offer 4k@60, tempted to reach out and find how they did it.
How does one know if the videos are 4096K? My monitor is a normal one and I'm not spending over $5K to find out.
Which camera did you finally get that does the 4K videos?
At least one of the posts on this issue I found had the author insisting that their videos would only be recognized as 4k if it was 4096x2160. Lots of mis-information out there I suspect.
A few more hummingbird shots. I think it's the same bird as last time. They are social birds. He was preening for me. Opening/closing his eyes. Scratching himself. Long tongue sticking out, etc. I was able to take some shot, slowly move a few feet closer, take some more shots. Repeat. I probably got within 10-12 feet or so.
I obviously don't have a sports/action/birder camera. It's not much of an issue only having 6 fps, the main issue is the non-existent buffer. 14-bit Lossless-compressed RAW + FINE jpg shooting = only 10 shot buffer. A little more fps would be nice, but more importantly a larger buffer is a must for this type of shooting.
Perhaps Lunar or Tannin could chime in and comment on the sharpness of the shots? Are they sharp, pretty sharp, crap? They are hand-held so that might be a problem. So hand-held 1/500 or 1/1000 sec f/5.6 or f/8 some with and without VR/IS. Image shake? JPG compression? Bird too small in frame? ISO? Lens quality? MUCH THANKS.
What is your purpose in capturing the images? If it is high quality print, then you need to get much closer.
If it is only for the web, then crop tightly. Nobody wants to see all that dead space.
I don't usually judge quality of web images, only the RAW files. The small part that is in focus looks OK. Try to isolate the bird on a different branch and stop down to f/8 if possible.
Can you set up a feeder so that the bird will be in the same area frequently? FWIW hummers are not exactly social; you'll see them chasing and fighting for territory, especially the males.
The OS should always be on. Why only ISO 220? Increase it to 400+ for the FF Nikon body.
The framing rate and buffer are fine for most purposes. Sheesh, 600mm and 6FPS was dream combination just a decade and a half ago.
Back in the 1970s I was shooting hummers about 1/2 frame with VPS and a lens that maxed out at 210mm. You need to be closer. :lol:
I wish I could remember passwords and upload to my website to post some examples.
I did not realize the lens did not focus very close. One can add some extension tubes.
I assumed the D610 was in the 70MB/sec.+ range, but perhaps not. What is the write speed? I know the SD slot on the D600, D800 and some other older bodies were capped in the upper 30MB/sec. range. The later bodies such as the D810, D750, D7100/D7200 write about twice as fast. In any case, shoot RAW only to increase throughput.
Per Nikon the close focus distance is 7.2 feet or 2.2 meters for the 200-500mm f/5.6E lens.
I'm currently using this SanDisk Extreme SD card which is rated at 40 MB/s. So I may be limited by SD card. I may have to buy one "high speed" SD card to see if I'm card limited or camera limited as far as write speed goes.
These helped me considerably. My camera takes one SD and one CF and I splashed out on one very fast of each. If I manage to fill them I can go to the slower cards (unlikely, they are 128GB each).
These helped me considerably. My camera takes one SD and one CF and I splashed out on one very fast of each. If I manage to fill them I can go to the slower cards (unlikely, they are 128GB each).
Are you sending NEF to one card and JPG to another? For personal use (not shooting on deadline), I suggest capturing NEFs only which will improve the buffer throughput. Are you shooting in losslessly compressed 14-bit mode?
I'm shooting RAW+JPG to one card. 14-bit lossless compressed RAW + fine-mode JPGs. I'm also mirroring (raid-1) the two SD slots. So I'm setup for the slowest possible write speeds.
I've been taking a 2-3 shot bursts, wait a few seconds, then another short burst trying to capture the birdies before they fly away. I'll just have a wait a bit longer between bursts to keep from overflowing the buffer.
I should probably just shoot JPG as I'm not doing anything with the RAWs as of yet. But then if by some miracle I take an actually good shot I won't have the RAW. Hopefully the faster cards will help.
It's a bit excessive to write to both cards. It is not like RAID 1, because there are not two separate channels in the cameras to write completely in parallel.
I did not even know it was an option to record 4 copies of the same image in camera. Are you paranoid about card failure? Do you fully test each new card with a complete write and read a few times?
If you need jpegs immediately for some reason, then send them to one card and RAW to the other. Capture NX-D is free and easy to use, so there is not much reason to record jpegs at all.
Do you have some potatoe to go with that quayle? :lol: