AMA Superbike @ Infineon
I have not been able to shoot any motorsports since MotoGP at Laguna last year :cry . It's been a long time coming, but it was nice to finally get out there and start blowing out the cob webs. Here are a few that I liked from the weekend. Feel free to comment.
Jeff
Hodgson gettin his mojo working.
Maladin on a hot lap
Show off...
This guy was spinning the rear tire for the last 5 laps through turn 2.
I think Ben won everything he raced in this weekend. Plus set(or tied) a record for 6 wins in a row in the Superbike class.
Chandler through turn 2.
Jeff
Hodgson gettin his mojo working.
Maladin on a hot lap
Show off...
This guy was spinning the rear tire for the last 5 laps through turn 2.
I think Ben won everything he raced in this weekend. Plus set(or tied) a record for 6 wins in a row in the Superbike class.
Chandler through turn 2.
Jeff Kapic
www.jeffkapic.com
www.jeffkapic.com
0
Comments
Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam
http://www.mcneel.com/users/jb/foghorn/ill_shut_up.au
Like them all .
Jeff
www.jeffkapic.com
love the show off & 'grass tracking on a superbike'
Adrian
my stuff is here.....
This guy is going about 100-130 mph.
Settings were 1/800 f7.1 ISO200. Still has some blurr to the wheels.
Under heavy braking here and beginning a quick right left sequence of turns. He is going about 50-75 mph.
Settings were: 1/640 f5.6 ISO 100. Still some blurr to the wheels...maybe not as much as the first shot, so I could have slowed more.
This one is coming out of the left hander of the "bus stop" sequence I was talking about. One of the slower parts of the track. He's going about 30-50 mph.
Settings: 1/250 f8.0 ISO100
All were shot on shutter priority with my 20D and the 100-400 "dust pump".:D
The shot of the guy spinning his tire was at 1/1000 f5.6 ISO200. Any head on shots(or straight behind), I would bump up the shutter speed and adjust the ISO as needed to get the aperature as large as possible, to let in as much light as I could to try to help it focus faster and keep the DOF as short as possible. I was not worried about the blurr of the wheels, because you cannot see anything moving anyway.
Another head on shot. Another slow part of the track...1/640 f5.6 ISO100. I could have shot it at 1/1000 or more and you would not be able to tell. f5.6 is the max aperature my lens will go, so if I wanted to bump up the shutter speed and still have the correct exposure I would have needed to change the ISO to 200 or 400.
Hope these are the kind of details you asking about...:D
Jeff
www.jeffkapic.com
Some nice piccies. I liked the show-off one. I saw that today on the way
back from lunch...A much nicer stand-up wheelie
Since I can't wheelie very well, this is something I love to see. Not to
mention the track is the place for that stuff.
Ian
Yes, AI servo and yes again, I did use different focus points depending on where I wanted the bike to be in the frame. And I tried different focus points at the same shooting location just to have the bike composed in different parts of the frame to see what I liked. Yea, I know how it is....it took me a while to save up for the lens too. No worries about the questions...I'm no pro but I don't mind sharing what I have learned.
Jeff
www.jeffkapic.com