tomscott said:The pics in this thread contradict your statement.
http://www.fredmiranda.com/forum/topic/1332307
tomscott said:Here are a few from that thread with the tamron 150-600mm and the 7DMKII borrowed from Tongho58
(Removed pics)
Most of the shots are at 600 and wide open. The guys obviously incredibly talented but this combo looks killer to me.
9W9A0872-1 by Bigz Ant, on Flickr
9W9A1122-1 by Bigz Ant, on Flickr
9W9A1306-1 by Bigz Ant, on Flickrchrysoberyl said:I have a 6D and it is a great camera, but not for BIF. My long lens is a 70-200 2.8 II with a 1.4X III teleconverter, but at some point I will buy a 400 or 500mm prime. So the 7D II would be nice to lengthen the reach. My main question is, is the 7D II AF substantially better than that of the 5D III? What other considerations should I have for BIF?
I can’t believe this topic has not come up – but if it has, I am sure someone will kindly direct me to that discussion.
Thanks,
John
GMCPhotographics said:chrysoberyl said:I have a 6D and it is a great camera, but not for BIF. My long lens is a 70-200 2.8 II with a 1.4X III teleconverter, but at some point I will buy a 400 or 500mm prime. So the 7D II would be nice to lengthen the reach. My main question is, is the 7D II AF substantially better than that of the 5D III? What other considerations should I have for BIF?
I can’t believe this topic has not come up – but if it has, I am sure someone will kindly direct me to that discussion.
Thanks,
John
In your situation I would go for a 7DII. But the 5DIII's af will not be the limitation for BIF images. I've got a lot of great images using 5DIII's. Regardless of how good the AF system is, technique and experience has a greater affect on your keeper rate.
Both are great cameras, MP is similar, AF is very similar and the handling is similar too. The only difference is the frame rate and physical size of the sensor.
Sorry, but that really sounds like you are trying to justify to yourself why you spent all that money on the 5D3 when you already had the 70D. Of course with the same lenses it will look wider on FF than on APS-C, but when you scale the focal length and the f-stop with the crop factor you should get equivalent images. If you still have differences that is either because of differences in lens quality or sensor technology (age, price point and pixel count) but not caused by the sensor size itself. Of course images wide open on FF (like 50mm f/1.4, which would be 31mm f/0.9 on APS-C) are not easily reproducible with APS-C, but that usually happens in the shorter focal length range and not in the very long focal length ranges like the 300mm and 400mm you mentioned.Khufu said:I've never shot a 7D II but as a 5D3 shooter I found the 70D to be great fun to shoot BIF for a little while... alas the Full Frame perspective of the 5D3 will get you photographs that pop in ways an APS-C sensor physically cannot. There are people on this forum who will tell you (and have already told me) otherwise but I simply have to write off their opinions as, I don't know, some kind of APS-C fanboys/gals, because the results I've gotten from shooting the 400mm f/5.6L and 300mm f/4L are at times quite magical and when I see a lot of 7D II shots I just wonder how amazing they may have looked with the wider frame perspective... I enjoy trying to get great animal portraits, if just 'reaching' animals is enough, grab that 7D II...
Also, I shoot FF action shots (Roller Derby, mostly), FF adds a whole new dimension to the images, or at least expands on ALL three of the usual ones![]()
Khufu said:But an imaging sensor is not a 'spot', it is a rectangle.
The edges of your sensor are not in the same physical location, yet they're capturing edges of the same photograph. A larger sensor increases this separation, which becomes quite significant as you consider sensor sizes from phones through M4/3 to APS-C, 35mm type and greater...
I'm sorry if you struggle to understand this, or if you're just too miseducated and stubborn to consider what you're citing as is "the same" is actually a rough guide but ultimately not true.
midluk said:Sorry, but that really sounds like you are trying to justify to yourself why you spent all that money on the 5D3 when you already had the 70D. Of course with the same lenses it will look wider on FF than on APS-C, but when you scale the focal length and the f-stop with the crop factor you should get equivalent images. If you still have differences that is either because of differences in lens quality or sensor technology (age, price point and pixel count) but not caused by the sensor size itself. Of course images wide open on FF (like 50mm f/1.4, which would be 31mm f/0.9 on APS-C) are not easily reproducible with APS-C, but that usually happens in the shorter focal length range and not in the very long focal length ranges like the 300mm and 400mm you mentioned.Khufu said:I've never shot a 7D II but as a 5D3 shooter I found the 70D to be great fun to shoot BIF for a little while... alas the Full Frame perspective of the 5D3 will get you photographs that pop in ways an APS-C sensor physically cannot. There are people on this forum who will tell you (and have already told me) otherwise but I simply have to write off their opinions as, I don't know, some kind of APS-C fanboys/gals, because the results I've gotten from shooting the 400mm f/5.6L and 300mm f/4L are at times quite magical and when I see a lot of 7D II shots I just wonder how amazing they may have looked with the wider frame perspective... I enjoy trying to get great animal portraits, if just 'reaching' animals is enough, grab that 7D II...
Also, I shoot FF action shots (Roller Derby, mostly), FF adds a whole new dimension to the images, or at least expands on ALL three of the usual ones![]()
candc said:if the angle of view is the same then the perspective is the same if shot from the same spot.
example is 10mm on aps-c and 16mm on ff. shot from the same spot, the perspective is the same
No, they just do not point in the exact same direction. The left picture shows a little bit more on the left edge, the right picture shows about the same bit more on the right edge.GMCPhotographics said:candc said:if the angle of view is the same then the perspective is the same if shot from the same spot.
example is 10mm on aps-c and 16mm on ff. shot from the same spot, the perspective is the same
The one on the left is clearly wider.
This is not exactly correct. You also have to scale the f number with the crop factor to really get the lens that gives equivalent images. If you scale both the focal length and the f number you keep the absolute diameter of the aperture constant, which is what then gives you the same DOF and the same amount of light per pixel (assuming same pixel count).JoFT said:
- [/size]14mm f2.8 on 5D3 (Samyang) this lens becomes:
- [/size]21mm f2.8 on 7D2
- [/size]35mm f2.0 IS on 5D3 (Canon EF) this lens becomes
- [/size]56mm f2.0 on 7D2
- [/size]85mm f1.4 on 5D3 (Sigma) this lens becomes
- [/size]136mm f1.4 on 7D2