Olympus-OM
[Top] [All Lists]

[OM] 300mm/4.5 with 2X TC and Looney Photos [was] Why the fondness for

Subject: [OM] 300mm/4.5 with 2X TC and Looney Photos [was] Why the fondness for silver noses?
From: "John A. Lind" <jlind@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Sun, 03 Mar 2002 15:58:16 +0000
At 16:58 3/3/02, Andy Gilbert wrote:

Thanks John, your photos also answered another question I had in mind, "Can
I put a 2x converter on it & photograph the moon?" :)  Also, you have some
great pictures on your site, which I have bookmarked so I can take a good
look later.

Andy,

Yes you can use a 2X TC, but I recommend the OM 2X-A. Even though the 300/4.5 is not one of the lenses it's specifically made for, it has worked very well for me [the 1.4X-A does list the 300/4.5]. Quality in a 2X TC makes a huge difference. Had a dirt cheap two-element "generic no-name" 2X TC long ago and it's probably worth more if I punch out the glass and use it as an extension tube.

Use of a *sturdy* tripod that does not wobble and using the lens tripod mount is all but a requirement even without a TC, but most especially with the TC. Use it very carefully. I found with the 2X-A I could cause shake visible in the viewfinder simply actuating the cable release.

Notes about the "moon" photographs:
(a) They are about 2X or so of what they appeared as in the slides. IOW, you're not going to get the moon that size on film. It will be smaller. About 1200mm focal length is required to begin filling the film frame. (b) At an effective 600mm focal length, be prepared to chase the moon across the sky. That magnification level reminds one quickly both the Earth and the Moon are in motion! Each frame made (about a half dozen for each) required readjusting the tripod head. Watch exposure time too. Earth rotation and Moon orbital motion will blur the result if it's more than a fraction of a second. (c) Air quality also makes a big difference. Best is a very clear nights with many stars, usually cool to downright bitter cold and very low humidity. High humidity, heat and especially smog will blur and haze details making you think it's the lens.

For a full moon, spot meter on the moon. If all else fails, estimate it using the "looney-11" rule for a full moon; f/11 at shutter speed = 1/film speed, then bracket exposure. Less than a full moon shows more crater detail from side lighting, especially a crescent moon, but requires more exposure just as any other side-lit subject material would. Bracket until you have experience with it to know what works! Kodak has the following about the Moon in (with a slight difference in exposure recommendation):
  
http://www.kodak.com/cluster/global/en/consumer/products/techInfo/p150/p150a.shtml

The moon. Since the moon is our closest celestial neighbor, it presents exceptional opportunities for astrophotography. The full moon requires the same exposure as a sunlit subject here on Earth. The gibbous moon (between half and full) requires two times as much exposure as a full moon (1 stop more); the half moon requires 2 stops more exposure; and a crescent moon (less than half) requires 3 1/2 stops more exposure than a full moon.

Although the moon appears large to your eye, it is a very small subject to photograph. For example, with a 50 mm camera lens, the image of the full moon will be less than 1/50 inch (0.5 mm) on your film, hardly more than a speck. But you can take excellent pictures that will show some surface detail if you use a lens of at least 12 inches (305 mm) focal length and make a photographic enlargement to gain additional magnification.

You can determine in advance the approximate diameter of the moon's image that you'll get on your film by dividing the focal length of your camera lens by 110. Use the same units--inches or millimetres--for both image diameter and the focal length.

-- John


< This message was delivered via the Olympus Mailing List >
< For questions, mailto:owner-olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >
< Web Page: http://Zuiko.sls.bc.ca/swright/olympuslist.html >


<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
Sponsored by Tako
Impressum | Datenschutz