josephandrews222
I Shot the Sheriff, but I Did Not Shoot the Deputy
Cardinals here in Illinois today, too--quite a few, in fact. The exposure time for the handheld image of the redbird below was 1/180 sec (5D3/100-400 II @ 400 + 1.4 TC). Thank goodness for IS!
I saw references a couple of pages ago here referring to the sharpness properties of a 200-500 lens (a Nikon?). Before my purchase of the Canon 100-400 II, my go-to long zoom was a Tamron 200-500 (first gen, I think)...a decent enough lens for the price...but in my hands without image stabilization I pretty much always needed at least a monopod. I still own the Tamron--will be fun to try it with the EOS R5.
Which leads to a question or two.
How does the R5's IBIS work?
I presume the IBIS in the R5 supplies extra stabilization to Canon-branded lenses that feature IS (such as the 100-400 II).
I also presume the IBIS in the R5 supplies a couple of stops of stabilization for Canon-branded lenses that do NOT feature IS (such as the 11-24).
What about lenses such as the Tamron 200-500 (EDIT: my version of this lens; more recent versions do offer IS)...which does not offer any stabilization.
When the Tamron 200-500 (no IS) is coupled with the R5, are the images that result from this combination able to utilize the R5's IBIS?
=====
The second image here is a Northern Mockingbird, I think. It takes me back to my very first DSLR bird pic with a zoom lens (Rebel XT/350 @ ISO 1600; Canon 70-300)...about 15 years ago.
Thanks for reading.


I saw references a couple of pages ago here referring to the sharpness properties of a 200-500 lens (a Nikon?). Before my purchase of the Canon 100-400 II, my go-to long zoom was a Tamron 200-500 (first gen, I think)...a decent enough lens for the price...but in my hands without image stabilization I pretty much always needed at least a monopod. I still own the Tamron--will be fun to try it with the EOS R5.
Which leads to a question or two.
How does the R5's IBIS work?
I presume the IBIS in the R5 supplies extra stabilization to Canon-branded lenses that feature IS (such as the 100-400 II).
I also presume the IBIS in the R5 supplies a couple of stops of stabilization for Canon-branded lenses that do NOT feature IS (such as the 11-24).
What about lenses such as the Tamron 200-500 (EDIT: my version of this lens; more recent versions do offer IS)...which does not offer any stabilization.
When the Tamron 200-500 (no IS) is coupled with the R5, are the images that result from this combination able to utilize the R5's IBIS?
=====
The second image here is a Northern Mockingbird, I think. It takes me back to my very first DSLR bird pic with a zoom lens (Rebel XT/350 @ ISO 1600; Canon 70-300)...about 15 years ago.
Thanks for reading.


Last edited:
Upvote
0









