Go Back   oOple.com Forums > General > R/C Graphy!

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 18-07-2007
aaron_ aaron_ is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 18
Default My first tries on DSLR-photography

...so there was this Canon cashback-thing back in April till June.
I originally wanted to go with Nikon (D200) but they don't have the compact, leight weight 70-200mm f/4 zooms.
This together with quite a low price on the 30D made the deal for me.

Here are some pictures with the combo (and a Tamron 17-50 f/2,8 for the wide angle things)
I'll only post the first one of the series and hyperlink the others since they're quite big (almost always near 100% crops)
Click on the pictures and the should enlarge to full size.


Hpi Racing Firestorm 10T
For review purposes. This one was actually quite easy, since trucks generally react more sluggish and are less prone to get thrown around.

Some still shots
They still need post processing

Buggies in action
Well, with buggies, I always have difficults in tracking them. At close distances of ~2m at 200mm focal length, I can hardly get sharp pictures:

So the solution was to back off a few metres, which makes focussing and tracking easier, but requires a lot of cropping.
You might remember the location, since the pictures were shot at the RMC-Vienna





I like the wide-angle shot a lot better, tough I didn't like how I had to place myself to get the picture









Next time, I'll use a tripod and a red dot sight on the camera so I get a bigger field of view and catch up with the action faster at close distance.
It's going to be my first race behind the camera


I hope you like the photos! C&C is always welcome!
__________________

http://www.offroad-cult.org
your #1 source for r/c offroad-action!
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 18-07-2007
VintageRacer's Avatar
VintageRacer VintageRacer is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 541
Default

Great static shots. The fire in the background looks fantastic. Pity about the lens and flash reflections on the other 2, Photoshop ought to be able to sort them out.

Page curl !! . It's just wrong (IMO)
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 18-07-2007
Lee's Avatar
Lee Lee is offline
Lee-Mag
 
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: More north than Northy!!
Posts: 6,943
Default

Very cool photos, love the losi!!


Vintage:

What do you mean the flash reflection and the lens? I am new to this so i am not picking up what the trained eye would see, if you could point out the imperfections i would be grateful.
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 18-07-2007
mole2k's Avatar
mole2k mole2k is offline
Mad Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Northern Ireland
Posts: 1,226
Send a message via MSN to mole2k
Default

Great first shots, the fire is a great idea.

When Im shooting buggies I quite often take the pictures when they are at the apex of the corner, I would also for the most part manually focus on a point then take the picture once the car enters that point. I usually go for as short a distance between me and the car to enable you to get some nice soft out of focus backgrounds.
__________________
Tamiya TRF 501x Worlds Edition
Team Associated B4

www.rcbearings.co.uk
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 18-07-2007
aaron_ aaron_ is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 18
Default

Thanks for the kind comments so far!

Vintage Racer, I'll upload a better fire shot without the page curl effect later.

Mole2k, thanks for your input!
Do you have any tips for manual focusing and "guessing" the right moment?
I tried prefocusing (although with AF) but the results weren't very good: DOF is about 40-50cm, and when you're low on the ground, there's hardly any reference for you to see, when the Buggy is about to enter the DOF.

The Nikons have a focus trap, Canon excluding the 1D series have not, which is really a shame It could be very useful in shots where the car is coming towards you and the ground is to "flat" (perspectively spoken) to guess the distance.
The Canon focus trap means taping the last contact plate on the right of the lens when viewed from behind, but you loose any autofocus by doing this.
__________________

http://www.offroad-cult.org
your #1 source for r/c offroad-action!
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 18-07-2007
bigred5765's Avatar
bigred5765 bigred5765 is offline
Lion-O - King of the Thundercats
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: chorley
Posts: 8,474
Send a message via MSN to bigred5765 Send a message via Skype™ to bigred5765
Default

awsome stuff
good luck with the new cam
__________________
Mattys the driver,my names carl
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 18-07-2007
mole2k's Avatar
mole2k mole2k is offline
Mad Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Northern Ireland
Posts: 1,226
Send a message via MSN to mole2k
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by aaron_ View Post
Mole2k, thanks for your input!
Do you have any tips for manual focusing and "guessing" the right moment?
I tried prefocusing (although with AF) but the results weren't very good: DOF is about 40-50cm, and when you're low on the ground, there's hardly any reference for you to see, when the Buggy is about to enter the DOF.

The Nikons have a focus trap, Canon excluding the 1D series have not, which is really a shame It could be very useful in shots where the car is coming towards you and the ground is to "flat" (perspectively spoken) to guess the distance.
The Canon focus trap means taping the last contact plate on the right of the lens when viewed from behind, but you loose any autofocus by doing this.
Generally when I prefocus I do it at the slowest point of the corner to give me the most chance, If you are looking at a car driving towards yourself at 200mm at a relatively close focal distance then the car will go in and out of the focal plane very quickly. The trick is not to wait untill the car is in focus, if you see the car in focus in the viewfinder then you missed your window, as the car is about to come into focus I would usually fire the shutter then depending on the speed of the cars comming towards you.

The way I learnt was basically at my local club we race indoors and I would go and fire off 500-1000 shots every night practicing getting manually focused head on shots untill i could hit them at a relatively sucessfull rate. I did a few over jumps that i basically set the focus point to where the cars would be as soon as i see them pass a point.

Here is a shot from the BADMCC track in N.Ireland. The shutter speed was far to high but I didnt have any 77mm ND filters with me to slow it down enough to get a bit of wheel blur sadly. I was crouched on the ground with the camera poking through the wire mesh fence about 6" off the ground at the end of the main straight this was just into the braking zone.
__________________
Tamiya TRF 501x Worlds Edition
Team Associated B4

www.rcbearings.co.uk
Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 12:23 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
oOple.com