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21
Nature, Flora, Fauna & Landscapes / Re: Possibly less familiar birds
« Last post by Les Olson on January 16, 2026, 11:14:58 »
Thanks for these Les
The second one , Olive-backed Sunbird, is a wonderful reminder that it's not winter in certain parts of the world :)

Thank you. One of the distinctive things about Australian flowering trees and shrubs is that they flower more or less randomly throughout the year, so, blossom and nectar eating birds and mammals are much more numerous and bigger than in parts of the world where you only get flowers in spring. At night the "flying foxes" - 40 cm fruit and blossom eating bats - come and eat the flowers as well.
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Nature, Flora, Fauna & Landscapes / Re: Possibly less familiar birds
« Last post by Les Olson on January 16, 2026, 11:01:50 »
Thank you. The combination of the Z50II and the 28-400 is outstanding. f/8 over a lot of the range sounds like a problem, but these were at ISO 1600 and I didn't do any noise reduction in post. People want a Z mount D500, but I couldn't do this with the d500 and the 200-500/5.6 hand-held.
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Themes, Portfolio Series, PaW, or PaM / Re: [Theme] Show us your self-portraits
« Last post by Hugh_3170 on January 16, 2026, 10:49:33 »
Different for sure  -  but nice.  I like this a lot.

It's been a while and I guess it's time to send an update. This is me and a Contax 139 Quartz "burned: on wood :)
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Nature, Flora, Fauna & Landscapes / Re: Possibly less familiar birds
« Last post by ColinM on January 16, 2026, 10:17:46 »
Thanks for these Les
The second one , Olive-backed Sunbird, is a wonderful reminder that it's not winter in certain parts of the world :)
25
Your Weekly Blog / Re: January 2026!
« Last post by Frank Fremerey on January 16, 2026, 10:10:12 »
I took this photo of Joseph Weizenbaum a while ago, when I met him in Berlin. Who is? https://www.weizenbaum-institut.de/en/institute/our-guiding-principles/about-joseph-weizenbaum/

Tech: FM-2n with 1.4/50mm Ai and Fuji Velvia 100, scanned with the Nikon D850; 2.8/60G; current Nikon Film scanner scew in contraption.

Why do I post it?

Because we face a very strong form of ELIZA-effect (humans like to converse with machines more than with humans live or through machines): https://www.technologyreview.com/2025/04/08/1114369/ai-companions-are-the-final-stage-of-digital-addiction-and-lawmakers-are-taking-aim
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Nature, Flora, Fauna & Landscapes / Re: Possibly less familiar birds
« Last post by Bent Hjarbo on January 16, 2026, 09:44:12 »
Nice, it shows the capacity of the Z50ii.
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I found another lead.
Quote
其中200-400一二代比较特殊,有镜筒受潮膨胀的故障,表现为手动自动双失效,也可以不换件维修
They are saying the 200-400 VR first and second versions both suffer from this kind of problem.  The barrel expands due to humidity, and it causes both focusing to fail.
(... How?!  I know Nikon's microscopes have these types of insane expansion problems.  Okay maybe I just answered my own question.)

I just had a chat with the seller.  He told me it can be mitigated by trimming the barrel.  The issue was due to bad quality casts using impure aluminium, which causes it to expand when subjected to humidity.  This leads to a total breakdown of manual and autofocus.
I will send the lens to him and report back.  $600 in total for a functional 200-400 is not that bad in my opinion.
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Lens Talk / Repair options for a 200-400mm F/4G VR (first gen, red VR text)
« Last post by Macro_Cosmos on January 16, 2026, 07:23:10 »
Hi there,

I have one of these, the focus no longer works.
I can rotate the focus ring, however, the scale indicator will not change.  I cannot focus the lens at all.  No autofocus, no manual focus.  The focus scale window shows that the lens is stuck at around 15m.
Considering how bad the 200-400 lenses perform at far distances, this might not be too bad.  Does it produce good images at around the 15m mark? 

Here is an informative link I found: https://www.dpreview.com/forums/threads/repairing-replacing-a-200-400mm-vr1.4595309/

The author has the same issue.  The lens can be zoomed in and out, but it does not focus at all.  The motor appears to be fully functional.
As the author claims:
Quote
They looked at the lens and said they couldn't repair it due to lack of replacement parts; it apparently was not the SWM, but an internal "dent". I've no idea how it became damaged. Any ideas?

I contacted a camera repair shop in China selling some SWM motors for this lens. 
They told me that:
- Forget it, the SWM works but the lens barrel has issues, it cannot be repaired
- We will not touch it

The lens has its hood, the filter insert and the tripod foot.  I paid $350 for it.  If I sell all of these parts, I will be able to get most of my money back and keep the heavy doorstopper.
I can probably profit if I sell the functional SWM motor, they run for $200-400.

What are the options?
1. I can wait for a unit that focuses badly to salvage the so called "barrel" that is causing focus issues.
2. Just sell it for parts.
3. Adapt to Z-mount with a focusing helicoid, maybe that can work a bit.
The problem with #3 is its focusing mechanism.  If the lens moves various internal groups to achieve focus, then the third option will probably not work, or produce bad results.
I have the repair manual.  The manual focus coupling makes no sense to me.  I cannot see how "barrel problem" can cause both manual and autofocus to not work.  This seemed like a design flaw.
(Page 32: https://elektrotanya.com/nikon_af-s_vr_zoom-nikkor_ed_200-400mm_f4g_if_jaa78751_sm.pdf/download.html)
It appears that the SWM is coupled to the barrel via a "swm connecting plate".  The SWM rotates, engaging this plate to perform focusing.  If some linkage inside gets damaged, I suppose that is how we can arrive at a situation where neither focusing works.  This also means I can simply replicate the part in CAD and make one with a CNC.

Both 200-400mm lenses feature a front protective glass window.  Has anyone tried to remove it to see if the images improve? 
29
Nature, Flora, Fauna & Landscapes / Possibly less familiar birds
« Last post by Les Olson on January 16, 2026, 06:26:36 »
Helmeted Friarbird, Philemon buceroides. Common in dry forest around the tropical Australian and Indonesian coast, relatively large (about 40 cm) and with a variety of raucous calls that are a feature of the tropical dawn.

Olive-backed Sunbird, Cinnyris jugularis; female. A tiny (10cm) mainly nectar eating bird - in this case nectar of the Umbrella Tree, Schefflera actinophylla - native here but a weed in many areas outside its original home.

Both Z50II with 28-400 @400mm with cropping. Bird recognition works quite well on the Z50II. 
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Themes, Portfolio Series, PaW, or PaM / Re: [Theme] b&w's
« Last post by Jürgen Pfeiffer on January 15, 2026, 21:26:20 »
Rondslottet (Rondane, Norway) in September.
That's a very nice photo, something to hang on the wall.
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