A Coyote and Some Mulies with a Russian 500mm F8 Lens
Colorado CJ
Registered Users Posts: 155 Major grins
I recently picked up an old Soviet 500mm F8 mirror lens, a 3M-5C-MC. I decided to modify my Photosniper stock (another Soviet era photography kit) to use the new mirror lens and my Sony Nex 5n. the 5N's shutter is pressed with the stock's trigger via a pushrod.
3M-5A-MC-with-Photosniper-Stock-1 by Colorado CJ, on Flickr
I took this setup out today to do a little wildlife photography. It turned out not to be a good day for photos since we had a low cloud ceiling all day and the dust was blowing with winds in the 10-20 m.p.h. range.
That, combined with the F8 lens made it necessary to use pretty high ISO during shooting (between 2000-3200 ISO).
That would have been fine with my D600, but the Nex 5N isn't near as good at those high ISO settings (although not extremely bad).
With that said, here are a few photos.
I came up on a lone coyote watching over a prairie dog town.
24-Nov-2012-1 by Colorado CJ, on Flickr
He stalked up to a prairie dog and got him
24-Nov-2012-2 by Colorado CJ, on Flickr
All that hard work made him sleepy (he didn't eat the prairie dog, probably saving him for later )
24-Nov-2012-3 by Colorado CJ, on Flickr
Just a view to the west
24-Nov-2012-4 by Colorado CJ, on Flickr
Here's a pretty good sized mulie. He was pushing around a tumble weed in the high grass
24-Nov-2012-5 by Colorado CJ, on Flickr
Here's another mulie, quite a bit smaller than the first one
24-Nov-2012-6 by Colorado CJ, on Flickr
Well, that is it for today. I kind of like the way this mirror lens renders images. They aren't as sharp as my Nikkor 300mm F4, but they have a certain "old" look to the photos that I kind of like. It is definitely a lens you need to use on a bright day because of the F8 set aperture. I'll be bringing it out on the next bright day we have to see how it works at lower ISO's.
3M-5A-MC-with-Photosniper-Stock-1 by Colorado CJ, on Flickr
I took this setup out today to do a little wildlife photography. It turned out not to be a good day for photos since we had a low cloud ceiling all day and the dust was blowing with winds in the 10-20 m.p.h. range.
That, combined with the F8 lens made it necessary to use pretty high ISO during shooting (between 2000-3200 ISO).
That would have been fine with my D600, but the Nex 5N isn't near as good at those high ISO settings (although not extremely bad).
With that said, here are a few photos.
I came up on a lone coyote watching over a prairie dog town.
24-Nov-2012-1 by Colorado CJ, on Flickr
He stalked up to a prairie dog and got him
24-Nov-2012-2 by Colorado CJ, on Flickr
All that hard work made him sleepy (he didn't eat the prairie dog, probably saving him for later )
24-Nov-2012-3 by Colorado CJ, on Flickr
Just a view to the west
24-Nov-2012-4 by Colorado CJ, on Flickr
Here's a pretty good sized mulie. He was pushing around a tumble weed in the high grass
24-Nov-2012-5 by Colorado CJ, on Flickr
Here's another mulie, quite a bit smaller than the first one
24-Nov-2012-6 by Colorado CJ, on Flickr
Well, that is it for today. I kind of like the way this mirror lens renders images. They aren't as sharp as my Nikkor 300mm F4, but they have a certain "old" look to the photos that I kind of like. It is definitely a lens you need to use on a bright day because of the F8 set aperture. I'll be bringing it out on the next bright day we have to see how it works at lower ISO's.
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Comments
The last shot and composition is my fav.
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How many photographers does it take to change a light bulb? 50. One to change the bulb, and forty-nine to say, "I could have done that better!"