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- Jake From
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I was shooting Burrowing Owls this weekend with the R7. On Saturday I used the R7 with the 100-500mm, but on Sunday I put the 100-500mm on the R5 and shot video while using the 100-400mm RF on the R7 to do stills. The 100-500mm works perfectly on the R7 and the eye tracking is amazing - it even grabbed the eye of a completely dark owl in a palm tree.
I found the image stabilization with the 100-400mm to be slower to lock in, though once it did it was rock solid. I also found the eye tracking to miss once in a while, which did not happen with the more expensive lens. But more than anything I experienced something completely unexpected on several occasions.
I was moving from burrow to burrow inside a neighborhood, and when I'd finish in one place I'd turn off both cameras, put them in the back seat of my car, drive to the next burrow, and take them out and start shooting. On several occasions when I started up the R7 I found that the camera had gone from Auto ISO to ISO 100 and/or shutter speed had gone from 1/640s to 1/15s, or something close to that. I know that the wheels are in different locations and have different functions, and if I'd been pixel peeping between spots I would chalk it up to spinning a wheel at the wrong time. But I don't ever touch the ISO button while shooting (and if I do, I know it), and I can see a shift of 1 or 2 spots on the shutter wheel, but that jump requires a heck of a spin.
There's likely not enough folks out there who have the R7, let alone this combination, but if anyone hears of anything around this please post a link. I actually got my copy before the rep I know, so I can't even ask him. LOL
All that said, the budget combination of the R7 and 100-400mm is an impressive wildlife rig on the cheap - provided what I'm experiencing isn't baked in - and it's light as a feather.
I found the image stabilization with the 100-400mm to be slower to lock in, though once it did it was rock solid. I also found the eye tracking to miss once in a while, which did not happen with the more expensive lens. But more than anything I experienced something completely unexpected on several occasions.
I was moving from burrow to burrow inside a neighborhood, and when I'd finish in one place I'd turn off both cameras, put them in the back seat of my car, drive to the next burrow, and take them out and start shooting. On several occasions when I started up the R7 I found that the camera had gone from Auto ISO to ISO 100 and/or shutter speed had gone from 1/640s to 1/15s, or something close to that. I know that the wheels are in different locations and have different functions, and if I'd been pixel peeping between spots I would chalk it up to spinning a wheel at the wrong time. But I don't ever touch the ISO button while shooting (and if I do, I know it), and I can see a shift of 1 or 2 spots on the shutter wheel, but that jump requires a heck of a spin.
There's likely not enough folks out there who have the R7, let alone this combination, but if anyone hears of anything around this please post a link. I actually got my copy before the rep I know, so I can't even ask him. LOL
All that said, the budget combination of the R7 and 100-400mm is an impressive wildlife rig on the cheap - provided what I'm experiencing isn't baked in - and it's light as a feather.