Thanks very much. I still have a lot of misses too. I was using the EF MkIII with 1.4 and 3 stop ND.Great shot Roo. I was literally shouting at the TV all the way at the last lap when Alex did that winning pass through turn 2 and onwards.
I'm always amazed how pros like you can get the bikes so tack-sharp, and still use f/4. I struggle so much to get them sharp even with amateur level riders (which ride much slower than the MotoGP demigods).
The EXIF did not contain the lens - but since it says 560mm and f/4 I'm assuming that you are using an 400mm + 1.4x TC. RF or EF?
Thanks very much Click!Awesome! I really like this shot!Well done, Roo.
Abosolutely devastating for Miller to be taken out by Alex Marquez that way. AM73 usually doesn't do things like that, so I wonder what happened. Nakagami torpedoed Rins and Bagnaia in a similar fashion at Catalunya, so I wonder if there's something up with the Honda.Thanks very much. I still have a lot of misses too. I was using the EF MkIII with 1.4 and 3 stop ND.
The race was amazing - had Bagnaia held Rins through Southern Loop, I doubt he would have been beaten. Rins was really good heading in to Southern Loop but Bagnaia could hold him out of there and around to Honda/Miller corner. Marquez was strong through Hayshed but Bagnaia was just so good over the top of Lukey Heights and into MG. The disappointing thing for me was Miller getting taken out - hard to imagine, but it could have been an even more thrilling finish with a couple of extra riders in the mix.
It's funny, I had a mate send me a message that a UK tog was recommending using people detection for the R3 when shooting motogp. I immediately replied BS as I had just finished testing it by accident. I hadn't switched off people detection on my alternate (*) settings and it was hunting for a target on anything but a motorcycle with a rider. As soon as I switched it back to vehicle, it locked hard every time.The Island seem to throw up tight races, just like The Cathedral (TT Assen). This year was the 4th time I've been to Assen and was using the R3 + EF 200-400, but I had horrible keeper rates. Standing at the GT chicane (shooting from slightly down the main straight, so the riders coming towards me), I had entire series (10-15 images or more) with a rider going through the chicane, but none were in focus, even though the "vehicle detection" was on and indicated it had detected a motorcycle.
Thank you. The ND served a double purpose - it got me under 1/125th sec on a really bright sunny day here and it also keeps the aperture out of dust spot range. The dust spots are not so much of a problem with the R3 but it was with the 1Dx2 and 3. Using the ND is not a problem as I don't often go above 1/320th for motorsport.Great photos Roo! The ND is a great idea, I've never shot bikes with one. I usually stop down, but the ND lets you keep the bokeh.
I try and shoot some racing when I'm not on the bike and was wondering if you panned for that shot of Garcia. Garcia is tack sharp, but Sasaki is showing some motion blur. Vietti's photo is an even better example of that.
Also, that photo of Garcia demonstrates exactly why I encourage fellow riders to go with clear visors when I'm taking photos for them. Mind if I borrow it to keep as an example?
Thank you. The ND served a double purpose - it got me under 1/125th sec on a really bright sunny day here and it also keeps the aperture out of dust spot range. The dust spots are not so much of a problem with the R3 but it was with the 1Dx2 and 3. Using the ND is not a problem as I don't often go above 1/320th for motorsport.
A 52 mm drop-in 3-stop ND, I've not seen a variable one. At the Island, I'm generally shooting at between 25 - 80m. The rider in the background of the Munoz shot is about 150m awaySo that's a 52mm drop-in variable ND filter? I have the drop-in CPOL which costs about 1 stop, but maybe a 3-stop ND might be worth-while.
What's the distance you are shooting at?
THanks. There is a VND drop-in version of the new EF-RF adapter. I have been trying to find any ND filters that drops into the Big Whites, but no luck so far. Is it an original Canon drop-in filter, a gelatine that you put in the standard filter folder, or a 3rd party drop-in filter?A 52 mm drop-in 3-stop ND, I've not seen a variable one. At the Island, I'm generally shooting at between 25 - 80m. The rider in the background of the Munoz shot is about 150m away
Great panning, Wonderful vehicles. Congrats, RooSome from Historic Winton 2022 back in May
Sorry, I missed that bit about the drop in filter - there is a Canon drop in screw filter holder I bought for the 200-400 years ago. It takes a 52 mm filter which makes it pretty cheap but you have to be careful with the band width of the filter or it won't fit. The Canon protect filter that comes with it is a good guide but I've had no problems with the Hoya 52mm PROND filters.THanks. There is a VND drop-in version of the new EF-RF adapter. I have been trying to find any ND filters that drops into the Big Whites, but no luck so far. Is it an original Canon drop-in filter, a gelatine that you put in the standard filter folder, or a 3rd party drop-in filter?