Club level Motorsports.Moderators: Greg B, Nnnnsic, Geoff, Glen, gstark, Moderators
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Club level Motorsports.Just one of the many shots I took on the day. Enjoyed myself greatly, still have a lot to learn about photography and especially taking those of moving objects.
Taken with the 70-300G. Cheers Brett Last edited by bwhinnen on Fri Nov 09, 2007 9:29 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Well done!!!
Those are the hard shots to get... to get your panning speed just right! New page
http://www.potofgrass.com Portfolio... http://images.potofgrass.com Comments and money always welcome
Hey that's just like my car! Except I have the non WRX model, different year, and its blue, no spoiler, hatchback/five door.
Excellent shot bwhinnen, and welcome to the forum. Greg - - - - D200 etc
Talent hits a target no one else can hit; Genius hits a target no one else can see. - Arthur Schopenhauer
Nice car, but as soon as hey hit a pole, they split in two. (Sydney users will understand)
Steve.
|D700| D2H | F5 | 70-200VR | 85 1.4 | 50 1.4 | 28-70 | 10.5 | 12-24 | SB800 | Website-> http://www.stevekilburn.com Leeds United for promotion in 2014 - Hurrah!!!
What about Hungarians, Steve?
Brett, A few of us enjoy motorsports in varying degrees. I'm less involved at a club level than I have been in the past, but I still use one of my marque's products as my avatar. But club motorsport is a great way to learn many things, and baseline photographic techniques, and safer driving skills, are well up there amongst them. g.
Gary Stark Nikon, Canon, Bronica .... stuff The people who want English to be the official language of the United States are uncomfortable with their leaders being fluent in it - US Pres. Bartlet
Kelvinator makes cars now? Hi Brett, welcome. Nice pic, nice car. If you took the picture, who's driving it? Or is it not the car mentioned in your sig?
Not a Kelvinator. g.
Gary Stark Nikon, Canon, Bronica .... stuff The people who want English to be the official language of the United States are uncomfortable with their leaders being fluent in it - US Pres. Bartlet
good shot brett... panned shots are not easy to master... looks like you're getting the hang of it quite well..
cheers http://www.markcrossphotography.com - A camera, glass, and some light.
Thanks for your encouraging words
Car is not mine, it is one of my friends I concentrated on taking photo's that day, and I'd have to say it was almost as much fun as being out there with them. And yes I do know what you mean about poles (well one was a tree and the other two a pole), sad and tragic events over the past few days down your way. Cheers Brett
Could you please explain how you get these kinda shots? I have a Lotus track day on the 15th of this month, and I'd like to try and grab similar stuff, as that's an awesome shot
I tried yesterday by setting the Apature down to 3.5, grabbing a focal point near where I knew the car would come past. Then when the car came past, I put the centre target onto the car (whilst keeping focus), and would follow the car in a smooth motion, and grab a few shots. Only about 3 out of the 50 turned out.... Most failed cause the car was blurry, and the background was great ... or in some cases, both were blurry I was trying with the 18-70 kit lens, but I also have a 70-300 (but didn't try with that, i'll need to for the track day though) Regards, Tommo.
First trick is to put the camera in Shutter priority mode. Then pick a shutter speed that will work, I usually use between 1/160 and 1/250 as I know I can hand hold and pan with that shutter speed and keep it mostly steady. I also put the focus method to continuous servo, so it will change focus for me as long as I keep the car in the central position, otherwise manually focus on a point that will be where the car is. Then just pan with the car and squeeze of a photo.
Hope this helps. Cheers Brett
Motorsports are my life.......
http://www.sierrafirerescue.com Basically I spen a lot of time at race tracks, so I chase the photogs down and grill em as much as possible. I occasionally give them rides in the truck for different perspective as well. Most guys are shoooting (unfortunately) Canon D1S MkII with 300mm 2.8 prime. (or similar) For good clarity you really need sunlight, as overcast will be hard to get clear images. Shutter priority at approx 1/320 - 1/400. If you want wheel blur go a little less 1/200 or so. It will be hard to get without a fast lens but possible. The other number 1 consideration, as in real estate. Location. Watch where they shoot from to get ideas. Closer is not always best. They usually pick a fairly slow corner where they can get about a 3/4 view from the front and zoom in enough to get the driver if possible. If you can set it up. manual focus will speed up write speed or AF-L, no noise reduction, sharpening, etc. Taht should get you going for now...I'll continue if I think of more Andy D70, 70-200VR, 18-70, 50 1.8, SB800
Blackberry PIN: 2029497E
Hey Brett, That did indeed - thanks. I was running in A mode, as I was told to get those kinda shots I had to set the aparture to the lowest number possible, but obviously not! I'll give that a go! Thanks again for your advice Regards, Tommo.
I also on occasion use manual if I can't get shutter right.
Manual Mode, F4.2, 1/250 80mm (70-300G), Raw+JPG Overcast Manual Mode, F4.8, 1/160 170mm (70-300G) Raw+JPG Sunny *notice more wheel blur in the 2nd shot Wish I had remembered my Circ Pol Filter, shots would have been much Better. I lear a lot from these guys here http://www.headonphotos.net Andy D70, 70-200VR, 18-70, 50 1.8, SB800
Blackberry PIN: 2029497E
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