JakTrax wrote:ftorre82 wrote:For example, if an aircraft is rotating on the runway, you will see two movements: one is the aircraft rolling on the runway, and the other one is the aircraft nose lifting off the pavement, so those different motion are very difficult to "copy" with the camera.
Precisely. Too many photographers get caught in the trap of believing IS will come to the rescue in all circumstances, however IS is most effective when nothing in the frame is moving. Similarly, when you're panning an aircraft with all wheels on the deck you're still getting different parts of the aircraft moving through different planes, although the effect is lessened the further away with aircraft is. IS won't really help.
If you've ever watched a 757 or 767 start its take-off roll you'll see that the horizontal stabs vibrate like mad! This is the case with all aircraft of course but it's particularly noticeable with these two types. No amount of IS is going to help and you'll always get some degree of micro-blur.
Karl
Both right. The VR system only guards against unintended shaking from unsteady hands or for instance (in certain modes) the shaking from an unsteady platform you are standing on.
For this kind of photo, the VR mode tries to eliminate unwanted vertical movements- but allows your panning.
The newer lenses with up to date stabiliser systems are really great. Even the 70-200mm F2.8 VR II Zoom Nikkor I used a lot was fantastic. I could take hand held panning photos at remarkably slow shutter speeds.
No wimberley tripod head was needed at all! It was actually worse when I tried it with the Wimberley.
Then the big heavy lenses like the 200-400 Zoom Nikkor, they do have VR but benefit from using them with a wimberley tripod head on top of a big, steady tripod. It helps with panning and making movement of the heavy lens/camera combination more precise/easier.
At longer distances, angles you still get blur at certain parts of the plane - you just have to keep your shutter speeds a bit higher compared to if the plane was side on.
The rest is just practicing. Photograph the boring common planes with very slow shutter speeds and keep doing it until you start getting the results. There will still be throwaway shots but eventually you’ll start pulling off these shots more and more.