First issue... The camera's metering system - I'm pretty sure now - is way the fuck off. I set the ISO to allow moderately fast shutter speeds to stop the birds tolerably, the aperture is fixed ('cause the lens is a scope), and I adjust exposure with the shutter speed. Center the needle and I pretty consistently get ugly washed out crap. Increase the shutter speed a healthy bit and I start getting beautiful rich colors. And there's no way to recalibrate or trick the camera into centering the needle where I want it to be.
Yeah, I can compensate but that leaves me pushing the left edge of the viewfinder range and having a lot of wasted space on the right. Pisses me off. And seems to be a common issue with a lot of cameras.
I'm also realizing just how unsuited for digiscoping this scope is in angled configuration. I knew there'd be issues and had thought of workarounds but nothing like some serious test driving to really start finding out what you're dealing with.
I know I'll be OK with something that stays nicely posed for awhile (a potoo who stays frozen so you'll keep thinking he's just a broken off part of the tree would be ideal) or keeps returning to the same perch but I also now fully realize that I'm gonna miss a fair percentage of shots that I wouldn't have with...
...a straight rig.
Back end module sells for close to 2.4K, weighs a ton, takes up luggage volume, sucks for regular birding. And the concept is supposed to be that you can just slap a camera on the back of what you're using for birding to get high quality shots. And Swarovski doesn't bend over backwards to get you fully tuned into exactly what you're getting into.
I mentioned a Scarlet Macaw that came in low and close from over the marsh at Palo Verde with a low sun behind us. One of the most beautiful sights I've ever experienced. Might have been able to hit him with the ATX, would've had a much better shot with the S. But, it's just now occurred to me, in all probability I'd have totally struck out with whatever I might've been using and trashed the experience I had unarmed.
A lot like the eclipse. The geeks all tell you to leave the photography to the super well prepared and equipped supergeeks and spend all your precious minutes and seconds experiencing what's happening.
Also... The view you get through the digiscoping setup is crap compared to the one you get through the scope alone. You're looking at a rectangle cut from the middle of a circle and lose a ton of light/brightness on top of that.
Put the camera with just the 43mm APO adapter on the tripod and took some test shots. Makes for a pretty decent wide angle lens. Forgot to try it with the thirty for comparison. On the to-do list.
Got a used remote shutter release off of eBay for under twenty bucks this morning, due Friday. I'll be happy to have it as it doesn't take much to get things vibrating working with that much length and magnification.
Got the first backyard Indigo Bunting of the season this afternoon - on film - while practicing. They come in for a couple weeks then totally vanish to nest locally. Should be seeing Rose-Breasted Grosbeaks too any day now. Their appearance window is about the same.
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Correction - 2019/04/25 2019/04/25 19:20:00 UTC
There actually is - but only in:And there's no way to recalibrate or trick the camera into centering the needle where I want it to be.
- P : Program A(uto)E(exposure)
- Tv : Shutter Priority
- Av : Aperture Priority
modes - and I'm gonna be working in M(anual) for the foreseeable future.