03-18-2024 08:47 AM
I Purchased a new RF100-500mm last month, and took it out in the field for a month. But out of the box, it wasn't producing sharp images with my R6 body. When shooting some birds in flight, I was next to a friend who had the same lens on his R3, so we swapped lenses and did a test. He shot both his lens, then mine, shooting in manual so the settings remained the same. Same light, same bird about one minute apart.
Here are the two, side by side. The one on the left is my lens (which I think is soft) and the picture on the right is his lens. What do you think? (Zoomed in with Lightroom)
03-18-2024 11:17 AM
Got to say this so just hold on, but almost all OOF or soft images are user caused and not camera or lens issues. Now that is not to say there can't be a camera/les problem but keep in mind the chances are small.
However you can't use the samples you displayed as proof. You need to set up a real static test where everything is essentially exactly the same. A good tripod and a good test subject are best. Exact settings and camera. You know all the same. Same, same completely. So, don't discount your lens yet.
03-18-2024 12:31 PM
@ebiggs1 wrote:Got to say this so just hold on, but almost all OOF or soft images are user caused and not camera or lens issues. Now that is not to say there can't be a camera/les problem but keep in mind the chances are small.
However you can't use the samples you displayed as proof. You need to set up a real static test where everything is essentially exactly the same. A good tripod and a good test subject are best. Exact settings and camera. You know all the same. Same, same completely. So, don't discount your lens yet.
sure, that I understand. the problem is, I don't have 2 identical lenses, so this was simply an opportunity to do some testing. I understand that is is usually settings and user caused, but I have 30 years shooting canon lenses and bodies, and I feel that I have a realistic expectation of their capabilities. This particular lens was new, but I'm pretty sure its a grey market lens (from Abe's of Maine), as they are not an authorized Canon dealer.
The question remains: do you think those two photos show equal sharpness? The settings are clearly shown in my post.
03-18-2024 01:34 PM - edited 03-18-2024 01:35 PM
Assuming all the post processing settings were the same I would agree that the image of the bird on the left is not acceptably sharp.
But, it looks like the water on the left is sharper than the water on the right, so perhaps there is a focus issue? Was one camera AI Servo and the other One Shot AF? Can you post a link to the RAW files?
03-18-2024 01:30 PM - edited 03-18-2024 01:33 PM
You can still achieve your goal with your lens by controlling the environment.
This will give you a good indication on how to evaluate if it's you or possibly an issue with the equipment.
R3 ~ R5 ~ R6 Mk II ~ R50
Lenses: RF Trinity and others
Adobe and Topaz Suite for post processing
Personal Gallery
03-18-2024 01:45 PM
both photos are with the same camera, swapping lenses. The shutter speed is 1/5000 on both, so camera shake would be eliminated in that case, even with NO IS in play. I'll try to post the raw somewhere.
03-18-2024 03:26 PM
I would agree with John, the one on the left the water is sharper and the one on the right it appears that the eye/head is sharper.
That was my rational for trying some controlled exposures with the tripod.
R3 ~ R5 ~ R6 Mk II ~ R50
Lenses: RF Trinity and others
Adobe and Topaz Suite for post processing
Personal Gallery
03-18-2024 03:35 PM
https://photos.app.goo.gl/73b6nB3LqL2SjCJE6
first photo was with the suspect lens (my lens), other photo is with my friends lens. Both shot on HIS R3, with same settings. I think the background difference is due to the bird's distance from the waves. The photos were taken about one minute apart.
03-18-2024 04:09 PM
It looks like the files are converted to small JPEGs when downloaded. Can you use Dropbox?
03-18-2024 04:12 PM
I also agree with John that there isn't a clear sharpness difference but instead where the critical focus occurred. This was a BIF so you have the focus system predicting movement and predictions aren't perfect. It would be no difference than shooting a fast series where some of the images from the sequence are near perfect while others are less so.
Both appear to be cropped so severely that they are into the "pixel peeping" mode such that neither has acceptable image quality at that level of cropping.
Rodger
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