One of my goals as a nature photographer has been to upgrade my equipment, as best as I can, and to get
the most reach possible with the
fewest items to carry with me on a hike.
The following illustrates how I can achieve
300mm to 900mm with my 300mm lens, 2 cameras (a Nikon D810 and on a Nikon D500), and a 2x TC to add (or not add) as I see fit.
(
Note: carrying an extra camera is a lot easier, and cheaper, than carrying an extra telephoto lens.)
For explanation, the following conversions are true:
- Nikon D810 = Full Frame (FF) camera with a 1.0x conversion;
Nikon D500 = Crop (APS-C) camera with a 1.5x conversion;
Nikon 2x TC doubles (x2) all measurements.
Therefore, a 300 mm is a 300mm on a D810 (1.0x), but is a 450mm on a D500 (1.5x)
With the added variable of a 2x Teleconverter (TC), the combination is essentially like having
4 different telephoto lenses (a
300mm, a
450mm, a
600mm, and a
900mm), by rotating the 2 cameras + the TC, as needed, centered around 1 lens.
That said, I was very worried that the quality of adding a 2x TC would significantly-degrade my images. However, I am pleased to report
excellent quality is retained when the 2x TC III is added. (I do notice 'some' reduction in quality, but not much.
It is worthy of mention that the 2x TC III and 300mm VR II came out at the same time, and were specifically designed to work together.
Note: the 2x TC does *not* work well with mediocre zooms. It is designed for high-end primes.)
For fun, here are the incremental (un-cropped) stages of closeness I am able to achieve from 300-900mm with 2 cameras, 1 lens, and 1 TC:
The subject is just the log itself, and how close I am able to get to it.
@ 300mm (D810 + 300mm)@ 450mm (D500 + 300mm)@ 600mm (D810 + 300mm + 2x TC)@ 900mm (D500 + 300mm + 2x TC)Click the images if you'd like. (Nothing special about the images, and no effort was made to render this ordinary subject. Posted just for interest-sake to illustrate
the reach differences.)
The flexibility of this combo is pretty neat. The weight of simply carrying an extra FF camera, plus 2x TC, is FAR preferable than carrying 3 extra 6-8-lb lenses. (Not to mention the cost).
Here are a several images, a couple taken with the D810 + 300mm + 2xTC (
@ 600mm), most taken on a hike this morning with the D500 + 300mm + 2xTC (
@ 900mm) at San Dimas Canyon:
Nikon D500 | 300mm f/2.8G ED VR II | Nikon AF-S 2x Teleconverter TC-20E III (@ 900mm, 10% crop) | 1/100/ | f/8.0 | ISO 100Nikon D500 | 300mm f/2.8G ED VR II | Nikon AF-S 2x Teleconverter TC-20E III (@ 900mm, no crop) | 1/1250 | f/7.1 | ISO 320Nikon D810 | 300mm f/2.8G ED VR II | Nikon AF-S 2x Teleconverter TC-20E III (@ 600mm, 50% crop) | 1/800 | f/6.3 | ISO 320Nikon D810 | 300mm f/2.8G ED VR II | Nikon AF-S 2x Teleconverter TC-20E III (@ 600mm, 10% crop) | 1/250 | f/6.3 | ISO 320Nikon D500 | 300mm f/2.8G ED VR II | Nikon AF-S 2x Teleconverter TC-20E III (@ 900mm, 60% crop) | 1/250/ | f/8.0 | ISO 4000 -
really pushing it hereNikon D500 | 300mm f/2.8G ED VR II | Nikon AF-S 2x Teleconverter TC-20E III (@ 900mm, fallen bird nest, no crop) | 1/200/ | f/8.0 | ISO 1000Nikon D500 | 300mm f/2.8G ED VR II | Nikon AF-S 2x Teleconverter TC-20E III (@ 900mm, no crop) | 1/200/ | f/8.0 | ISO 1000Nikon D500 | 300mm f/2.8G ED VR II | Nikon AF-S 2x Teleconverter TC-20E III (@ 900mm, no crop) | 1/1250/ | f/7.1 | ISO 320Nikon D500 | 300mm f/2.8G ED VR II | Nikon AF-S 2x Teleconverter TC-20E III (@ 900mm, no crop) | 1/100/ | f/8.0 | ISO 2000Nikon D500 | 300mm f/2.8G ED VR II | Nikon AF-S 2x Teleconverter TC-20E III (@ 900mm, 10% crop, after running up the hill) | 1/100/ | f/8.0 | ISO 2000Nikon D500 | 300mm f/2.8G ED VR II | Nikon AF-S 2x Teleconverter TC-20E III (@ 900mm, no crop) | 1/125/ | f/9.0 | ISO 160Nikon D500 | 300mm f/2.8G ED VR II | Nikon AF-S 2x Teleconverter TC-20E III (@ 900mm, 50% crop) | 1/400/ | f/8.0 | ISO 320 - again,
really pushing it here (extreme darks + extreme lights)
The versatility of this combination ... from a macro replacement (at a comfortable 15' distance) ... to a super-long telephoto option ... from
ISO 100 - ISO 4000+ ... is mind-boggling
Jack