09-17-2014 01:52 PM
hello im thinking of buying a canon eos 6d
i want a wide angle lens say f1.8 that i can shoot the milky way and constelations and just star shots etc any ideas on a lens for me please is there a lens that would do a multitude of jobs for me colin
09-18-2014 10:41 AM
@RobertTheFat wrote:
@Skirball wrote:Yeah, I meant to say... buy it from a reputable dealer, like Amazon or B&H, over a place like eBay. Now that B&H finally got competitive with their shipping turn around I've been using them a lot more.
This is a tad OT, but what was your previous experience with B&H and what did they change? Over the ten or so years I've been dealing with them, I've found them to be reliably faster than finding time to drive to the nearest mall. I don't doubt that my location has something to do with that; the shipping services between New York and the Boston suburbs do a remarkably good job. The biggest problem I've had is not being home (or not noticing) when they came around, and having to drive to the absurdly remote locations where they load and unload their trucks.
Yes, you're practically down the street from them. It used to take a week+ to ship to the west coast. I bought my 6D from them, in a kit, along with a couple other items. Total bill was just over $3000, and they sent it via ground. It took almost a week and a half, which feels like an eternity when you're waiting for a new camera 🙂 I expect more prioritized shipping on purchases of that magnitude.
I recognize that we're in the era of instant gratification, and ordering online is not exception. But I've been an Amazon Prime member for several years now and once you get used to it there's no going back. Half of the items I order are here the next day (benefit of living in a major city), but all within two. And I'm talking cheap little trinkets. I've had $5 items shipped priority via Amazon; the shipping had to cost more than the item. Conversely, I've had orders from B&H that took two days to just to get to the carrier.
I think B&H is a great company, and try to support a camera specific company with my purchases, but it just wasn't worth it to me when I could get it the same price, much sooner, on Amazon. B&H is a big company, they need to keep up with current practice if they want to be competitive. About 6 months (?) or so ago they introduced priority shipping. I've had two orders since then and both were too the carrier that day, and here two days later. I was really glad to see it.
09-19-2014 04:00 AM
hi around 270 quid
09-19-2014 04:05 AM
hi thanx for your comms i just realized somethin there is no to=ilt screen on the cannon 6d ??? can anyone suggest a model with a tilt sceen? i have also looked at the sony a7 s https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mctD-hu4s9U this seems a really impressive camera colin uk
09-19-2014 09:24 AM - edited 09-19-2014 09:25 AM
Yes, the Rebel T5i/700D. A lot of my astro-photography friends use them. And regardless what you may have read, a fast lens is not needed, or even desired for photographing the stars. Unless the stars have two legs, that is.
09-20-2014 02:13 PM
the bigger the aperture the more light it lets in if its dark u want to be able to let in as much light as possible ..they r very useful in low light conditions and also the field of view is larger
09-21-2014 01:13 AM
09-21-2014 09:26 AM
" As i recall, you friend use tracking mount."
And you would be correct. But I see there are other "experts" here on photographing the nighttime sky and if they believe an f1.4 is required for it, then who am I to try and set them straight. By all means have at it.
09-24-2014 11:24 AM
Like always, you just read the parts you want and ignore the rest. As I quite plainly stated, my reasoning for a fast lens is based off the assumption that you're not using a mount. Which, I'd assume that anybody who doesn't have basics like a wide angle lens, doesn't have an equatorial mount.
09-18-2014 10:41 AM
You do not need, or is it desirable, to have, or use, a large aperture for shooting the night time sky.
09-18-2014 10:53 AM
@ebiggs1 wrote:You do not need, or is it desirable, to have, or use, a large aperture for shooting the night time sky.
Faster lens = more light. More light = shorter shutter speeds or smaller ISO. Smaller ISO = less noise. Shorter shutter speeds = sharper stars if you don't have tracking.
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