10-23-2024 09:16 AM - last edited on 10-23-2024 09:36 AM by Danny
I have an R5 mkI and the R to EF adapter. I have a 70-200 f4 L IS ll usm lens. My question is I am considering purchasing the EF 1.4x ll extender, will this combination work. The lens works beautifully with the R5 and its canon adapter.
10-23-2024 09:33 AM
Ken Rockwell got it to work with an R:
10-23-2024 09:52 AM
Hi Ken, your picture shows both the 2x and the 1.4x converters connected. Does this actually work. I thought I had read that the 2x only works at f8 (I may be wrong) but that’s pretty impressive if they work both connected together.
10-23-2024 12:22 PM
@Steve07 wrote:
Hi Ken, your picture shows both the 2x and the 1.4x converters connected. Does this actually work. I thought I had read that the 2x only works at f8 (I may be wrong) but that’s pretty impressive if they work both connected together.
does it work? might depend upon definition of work. I have experimented with stacked extenders. EOS R5 seems to me to have some difficulty with autofocus when F Number is larger than 22, but I have done autofocus at F/45 as an experiment. Butterflies were hand held in bright sunlight. My EOS 80D will autofocus in live view mode at F/11 even though it is documented to only autofocus to F/8. The EOS R5 is always in live view mode because it has no mirror. Stacked extenders give enough additional pixels on small bird 400 meters distant to determine species and document sighting.
There will be a very small aperture with resulting small aperture diffraction blur
There will be a very shallow depth of field
It is difficult to get a fast enough shutter speed
Stacked extenders increase magnification without increasing minimum focus distance
This photo was made with EOS R5 and stacked extenders
https://www.rsok.com/~jrm/2022Oct07_birds_and_cats/2022oct05_monarch_IMG_0672c.html
and this one at 2.25 meters distance https://www.rsok.com/~jrm/2022Oct07_birds_and_cats/2022oct05_monarch_IMG_0664c.html
10-23-2024 10:10 AM
I am taking Ken Rockwell's word for it:
https://kenrockwell.com/canon/eos-r/r.htm
The aperture limit only applies to a AF-chip based DSLR. The idea is that there is no aperture limit with on-sensor phase detect.
10-23-2024 10:21 AM
Many thanks, very useful link.
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