You would probably find your ISO would be around 200-400 to get a good exposure even in great light. I set mine on auto ISO when birding so I can get the required shutter speeds.Thank you for your input. Hope to remember these tips the next time such an opportunity arises. Shooting the big lens straight up didn't seem too tough, at horizon level not so stable though.
Was out front shooting the breeze with a neighbor and out of the sky blue popped this eagle. Almost wet myself. Ran in to get the camera, fumbled to get the SD card in and set the dial and lens to auto, luckily the Tamron was already mounted.
Under the same conditions I will drop the aperture to match the sweet spot (8), faster shutter and take the iso to 100.
Curious of the focus mode and area in use? And if this shot was cropped?
Use AF-C, and try 9 point AF, maybe 21 if you're not sureFocus mode - AF-A
Focus area - Auto-area AF
Yes it is a crop. From (6000 x 4000) to (3366 x 2244) and then down to 1000 on the long side for jpg web.
Don't forget to turn off the VR/OS/VC at higher shutter speeds
In the shot posted, the camera was on full auto, AF-A only. AF-C is an option with P, S, A, M, modes. This camera will use 11 (as I have set) or 39 focal points.Use AF-C, and try 9 point AF, maybe 21 if you're not sure
VR 'mainly' comes into its own for static shots, or very slow stuff. It takes the lens longer to truly autofocus with the VR on, and you'll find more of the images are subject to blur if you're shooting faster moving objects. Its not recommended for tripod work apparently, though tripod stuff is not my arena.
Just another reason not to use Auto. Using Auto on a DSLR is using it to just a fraction of its potential. Auto is for p&s cameras only imo. Have a look at those other modes, and see which you feel you'd be comfortable using, and go from there.In the shot posted, the camera was on full auto, AF-A only. AF-C is an option with P, S, A, M, modes. This camera will use 11 (as I have set) or 39 focal points.
Yeah, I do appreciate getting to know more about photography in manual mode. With the film cameras once we dialed in our preferences and loaded the film, that is how it went. This morning I was shooting some deer that were bedded down at a distance. Was using M and set the three parameters only to be over ruled by Nikon for the iso. The user manual is lengthy don't ya know, still searching to address that issue.
Sounds like the camera is in auto iso mode. You'll have to dig into that manual again. Great to hear you're in M mode tho!Was using M and set the three parameters only to be over ruled by Nikon for the iso.