Larry Cohen
June 10th, 2011, 06:07 AM
Hi,
I have an XF100 and just got the Canon TL-H58 teleconverter. Of course it vignettes terribly at wide angle settings. Ahhaa! Changed the "menu settings" to the "1.5" lens, and it vignettes less - but nonetheless still does at wider settings. I thought I heard it shouldn't?
Oh, if I set the menu to 2 or 3x settings, it's just too telephoto with NO wideangle? Do they make a teleconverter without all the limitations?
Anyone else out there using this add on lens getting different results? Please tell me I'm WRONG!
Thanks,
Larry
Gerald OConnor
June 10th, 2011, 08:44 AM
Canon WD-H58W 0.8x Wide Converter Lens 4892B001 B&H Photo Video
Had it worked great
Larry Cohen
June 10th, 2011, 08:57 AM
Thanks, Gerald. That's good to know if I need a wide angle converter. No vignetting.
BUT . . . I was talking about the 1.5 teleconverter. But thank you for frplying with your experience. I'll surely make a note of that!
Larry
Gerald OConnor
June 10th, 2011, 10:37 AM
Ahh got me misunderstood lol
Lou Bruno
June 11th, 2011, 12:14 PM
Larry,
Anytime extra glass is added to a non-interchangeable lens, there is a loss in HD quality as well as a loss of f-stop(s). Personally, I find the 1.5X setting in the TELE menu works fine with no loss to the picture quality. I think the TELE-CONVERTER, unlike the wide angle attachment is unnecessary in my opinion. I actually ASSIGN the TELE MENU setting to the WFM (useless anyway) button on the rear of the XF-100.
Larry Cohen
June 11th, 2011, 12:22 PM
Lou, I was just drawing that EXACT same conclusion this morning. The vignetting is, at least in my opinion, terrible! You see vignetting throughout 50% of the zoom (from wide angle to medium telephoto.)
I was thinking the same thing you just said . . . why am I buying the tele-converter - with such a minor degradation of quality by just going the 1.5X route! I agree! Funny, I seem to remember years ago, the vignetting wasn't such a problem . . . was it with the XL-2? Don't remember.
BUT . . . I've also read if you just shoot normally, and enlarge the image in Final Cut Pro . . . (that's what we use) some say the quality is the same as doing it in the camera. So just fix it in post!
Then I're read something about the noise level being less if done in the camera, but the pixelization itself is the same ???? Didn't quite get it -- but with all that vignetting, it sure is hard to rationalize keeping the tele-converter.
I love it when these camera manufacturers say 'there "MAY" be image degradation when . . .
MAY!!! I don't think so - there IS!
Thanks for confirming my beliefs!
Larry
Jim Martin
June 11th, 2011, 01:19 PM
FYI ....all optical Teleconverters vignette.....From the days of the XL1 & PD-150 to now....you have to push in 50% to get past it.
Jim Martin
FilmTools.com
Nigel Barker
June 12th, 2011, 12:19 AM
Given the robust XF CODEC I would be more confident of good results with zooming in post rather than baking it in the camera.