Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/05/14

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Subject: Re: manual focus wildlife action (was: Re: [Leica] Thanks!! OT Nikon F5)
From: Michael Scarpitti <mikescarpitti@yahoo.com>
Date: Sun, 14 May 2000 13:03:33 -0700 (PDT)

- --- Doug Herr <telyt560@cswebmail.com> wrote:
> On Sun, 14 May 2000, Simon Lamb wrote:
> 
> > so that I can understand how non AF people operate
> is fast > action, what are
> > your (and the groups) opinion on this.
> > 
> > You are tracking a lioness stalking a hers of
> wildebeest and you know that you
> > are going to see a high speed hunt in action.
> Suddenly the lioness accelerates
> > and gives chase, dodging this way and that as a
> single young wildebeest tries to
> > evade capture.  The action is happening realtime
> and sometimes the animals are
> > passing behind trees.
> > 
> > Do you use your super SLR with predictive AF,
> focus lock-on so that you don't
> > refocus when the action goes behind obstacles,
> colour metering so you can forget
> > about exposures as they will be spot on and high
> shutter speeds because you has
> > 400 film in the camera and don't have time to
> change rolls.  You get 36 frames of
> > action captured in about 4 seconds, five seconds
> to change to new film, and off
> > again.
> > 
> > OR
> > 
> > M6 or R8 rangefinder/manual focus camera with none
> of the above.
> > 
> > Now, don't shoot me down in flames.  As I have
> said, my new M6 is great and I
> > love it but it is not the tool for the job IMHO
> for the scenario above.  My F5
> > is.  So, as so many have said before, the picture
> counts and I know what will
> > give me the best chance of getting it.
> > 
> > I would be interested in finding out how others
> with M6 or R8 would approach this
> > situation.  I know that many have said they were
> sports action photogs before AF
> > existed, so I would be interested to learn of any
> techniques that could work in
> > this type of scenario.
> > 
> > Simon
> 
> Simon,
> 
> My assumption in the scenario you've presented is
> that the photographer is using one of N****'s long,
> fast AF lenses on a solid tripod, possibly with a
> Wimberly tripod head.  Supposedly an ideal equipment
> setup.
> 
> First, I'd ditch the tripod.  Wildife action doesn't
> happen in predictable locations, as it might on a
> racetrack or a playing field.  It may be in front of
> me, to either side, above or behind me.  My 400mm
> and 560mm lenses are hand-held lenses, using a
> shoulder stock.  I've tripped over tripods too
> often, and lost too many shots moving the tripod, to
> consider using one aside from static situations.
> 
> Second, I'll ditch a lens that's too heavy to use
> hand-held.  Leica's f/6.8 Telyts will do quite
> nicely: a simple two-element acromat at the end of a
> long aluminum tube make a very light-weight lens.
> 
> Third, a traditional concentric-ring focus control
> is out.  Use a sliding-focus lens like the Novoflex
> or Leica f/6.8 Telyts.  With a little practice
> they're intuitive.
> 
> Fourth, use a viewfinder to die for.  Best choice is
> a Leicaflex SL or SL2, the next best is the Leica
> R8.  Fortunately both the Leicaflex and the R8 are
> big enough that I can keep a solid grip on the
> camera as I'm following the wildlife going through
> their activities.
> 
> Fifth, keep the camera simple enough that I can't
> inadvertantly set the wrong AF or metering mode.
> 
> I'm using the f/6.8 Telyts and Leicaflex SL camera
> bodies for my wildlife photos.  The focus is quick
> and positive no matter what the background is, no
> matter where the critter is in the viewfinder, even
> when the animal ducks behind a bush.  I've only used
> an R8 for a day, and with familiarity (and the right
> diopter setting!) it would be as easy to use as the
> SL.  I can track fast action with ease, swinging the
> hand-held lens around far more easily than walking
> around a tripod, and don't have to hunt for stable
> footing for the tripod.  If I can stand, sit or lie
> down, I've got a stable lens.  The lens can be used
> at shutter speeds as slow as 1/60 sec (400mm) with
> excellent results.  The SL's selective meter, a dumb
> CdS meter cell, has consistently given me excellent
> results on chrome film.
> 
> I've been in groups of photographers where the
> advantages of the fast-handling manual equipment
> made the difference between getting the picture and
> missing it because due to tripod fumbling or
> incorrect meter/AF/motor mode settings.
> 

The F5 is a piece of *****

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Replies: Reply from "Fernando Martins" <fer@caleida.pt> (Re: manual focus wildlife action (was: Re: [Leica] Thanks!! OT Nikon F5))
Reply from Simon Lamb <s_lamb@compuserve.com> (Re: manual focus wildlife action (was: Re: [Leica] Thanks!! OT Nikon F5))