Ofer Levy
May 11th, 2008, 11:22 PM
I am not happy to hear about all the problems some people have with the camera/lens and I hope these issue will be addressed and fixed. However, I only use the Z7 for wildlife with Nikon still lenses mounted on it and I am very pleased with the results.
Focusing is very easy when using the 'peaking' function and the viewfinder set to B&W.
Getting the exposure right is also easy with the histogram and zebra (set to 100).
The image quality is superb - especially when using top quality lenses. The Nikon 80-200 f2.8 still lens which is my main lens is performing very well with excellent image quality. An even better result I get with the Nikon 300 f2.8 manual focus fixed lens. I find it a bit problematic to work with a fixed lens though so I am looking to get a longer zoom lens to complement my Nikon 80-200 f2.8.
I consider getting the Nikon 200-400 f4 which is supposed to be a fantastic zoom lens although it is not cheap. (5 grand or so.)
Keep in mind that these still lenses when mounted on the Z7 become 7-8 times longer - the 80-200 behaves like 600-1600mm or so and the 200-400 like 1600-3200mm lense !!!! You must get a solid support for such long telephoto lenses. I use Miller carbon fibres tripod with a Vinten - Vision 3 fluid head which seem to deliver the goods.
I though I won't be able to use any lens which doesn't have an aperture ring but I think this is probably not true: the default position of a lens when mounted on a camera is wide open. By using the 4 ND built in filters and three levels of gain (-6, -3, 0) I can control the light in any day light even in a relatively slow ss of 1/50.
Everything is done manually. I shoot 1080i, 25p, 1/50, gain (-6, -3, 0).
I would love to hear your thoughts and comments.
Cheers,
Ofer Levy
Sydney, Australia
http://www.oferlevyphotography.com
Focusing is very easy when using the 'peaking' function and the viewfinder set to B&W.
Getting the exposure right is also easy with the histogram and zebra (set to 100).
The image quality is superb - especially when using top quality lenses. The Nikon 80-200 f2.8 still lens which is my main lens is performing very well with excellent image quality. An even better result I get with the Nikon 300 f2.8 manual focus fixed lens. I find it a bit problematic to work with a fixed lens though so I am looking to get a longer zoom lens to complement my Nikon 80-200 f2.8.
I consider getting the Nikon 200-400 f4 which is supposed to be a fantastic zoom lens although it is not cheap. (5 grand or so.)
Keep in mind that these still lenses when mounted on the Z7 become 7-8 times longer - the 80-200 behaves like 600-1600mm or so and the 200-400 like 1600-3200mm lense !!!! You must get a solid support for such long telephoto lenses. I use Miller carbon fibres tripod with a Vinten - Vision 3 fluid head which seem to deliver the goods.
I though I won't be able to use any lens which doesn't have an aperture ring but I think this is probably not true: the default position of a lens when mounted on a camera is wide open. By using the 4 ND built in filters and three levels of gain (-6, -3, 0) I can control the light in any day light even in a relatively slow ss of 1/50.
Everything is done manually. I shoot 1080i, 25p, 1/50, gain (-6, -3, 0).
I would love to hear your thoughts and comments.
Cheers,
Ofer Levy
Sydney, Australia
http://www.oferlevyphotography.com