| 14th August 2007, Canon 1DMKIII: |
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Disclaimer: I have been using different 1.6x Canon DSLR cameras for bird photography since June 2003. This review is concentrating on differences between those models and 1DMKIII (MKIII here after), on wildlife photography with long telephoto lenses. In addition there are some thoughts of ergonomic aspects and image quality compared to Canon 5D. Why change?: Main shortcoming with Canon X0D-series (10D, 20D or 30D) in bird photography is autofocus performance. Even for static subjects there may be several exposures needed to get one acceptable sharp picture. Not enough if we consider in that once a lifetime situation in bird photography is measured usually in seconds. For fast moving targets servo mode focusing is much too slow and inaccurate. The rate of in focus shots and slow number of frames per second are working against photographer each and every time with action shooting. Other benefits for 1-series body like weather sealing, bigger viewfinder and larger capacity battery themselves, as nice they are, would not justify camera upgrade in my situation. Auto focus: Very soon after launch of MKIII there has been ongoing debate on camera auto focus performance. Coming from 30D I have no insight for how the earlier 1-series cameras are comparing, but here are my conclusions of my MKIII, serial number 517xxx: I'm using one shot auto focus with center af-point activated (focus recompose style) in most static situations. MKIII performs flawlessly and is locking af spot on correctly and quickly usually with the first frame. A huge improvement over 30D which occasionally refused to lock or misfocused a little on several exposures made. This is utmost important as I'm shooting often at distant locations where it is possible to get one decent shot of a bird specie only once. Updated 22.10.2007: For moving subjects I used to select servo mode with all 45 auto focus points activated. For subjects in front of uniform background like sky it was working flawlessly as long as I could keep the subject in focusing area only somehow. But now, for anything else in bird in flight photography I'm recommending single point autofocus with assisting focusing points, more below. I keep the Custom Functions III settings at defaults, excluding C. Fn III-2 -> slow and C. Fn III-8. I have tried several combinations of other C. Fn III -custom functions but feel the defaults are more suitable. AF expansion with selected points: For flying birds I am setting C.Fn III-8 to '2' with only center focusing point selected. This concentrates focusing into center with the nearest surrounding points assisting if subject escapes from center point. It helps to lock and maintain focus, but even then tracking has to be smooth operation since autofocus is very fast on everything. MKIII should, in my opinion, has assisting expansion points set as they are with 5D: when one shot af -mode is set, expansion points are disabled. I would not like to switch that setting too often, but I'm afraid I have to. Please read more at Customization -chapter below. Two flight pictures on left should be without problems, like the third one. The rightmost picture shows near worst case scenario with distant subject in front of close-by contrasty background. Only center point selected AF with expansion points is working then definitely better. |
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Crop ratio: I'm mostly using EF 500/4L IS tele lens for my bird photography. With 1.4x teleconverter attached, 1.3 crop ratio of MKIII is ideal for most of my applications for this lens. I cannot see much 'reach advantage' with 20D or 30D, as cameras were focusing so sluggishly with f5.6. Many times I was forced to step down to bare 500/4 to get more auto focus performance. MKIII covers well also low light and moving targets with 500/4 + 1.4x teleconverter. Ten good megapixels enables some more cropping. I also felt that 1.6x ratio was occasionally too 'tight' when subject moved closer. For my purposes, the resolution given and current set of my optics 1.3 crop ratio is very close to an ideal field of view. The following example is no masterpiece by any means but demonstrating how you can crop heck out of a quick documentation shot, still ending up with something useful for web or small magazine pictures. Per pixel image quality is clearly better than with, for example Canon 30D. |
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Image quality: Color accuracy and details per pixel have improved from all previous
models I have been using. Especially out of focus background areas are looking much
better with less color graduation and more subtle tones. Color is 'deeper' than with
5D, but as example below demonstrates, the extra 2.7 megapixels of 5D can compensate quite
close with a little curves tweaking. Anyhow the Digic III, new sensor technology or whatever is looking very promising for future full frame models! I couldn't believe they
could better 5D pixel that much, very good work indeed. Unfortunately the in focus area and optics are not identical in the following comparison, but I hope you can get some idea of how close the 1DMKIII is pushing full frame 5D. First picture with crop: Canon EOS 1DMKIII, 1/60s, 90mm, f10, ISO 100 Second picture with crop: Canon EOS 5D, 1/20s, 90mm + 1.4XTC, f13, ISO 100 Third picture: Example of MKIII 'dreamy look' in spite of challenging dynamic range with some dark and white details. In my opinion this color layout is closer what I can see from viewfinder than the harsh graduations I got from X0D -series. |
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