These are a couple shots that I took a couple days ago as I was loading some tools back in my truck at a friend's house and heard a bird loudly chattering away, Turned out it was some distance away, perched at the top of a Leyland Cypress tree in their yard. From my vantage point from below on the ground and at the distance I was, I couldn't tell what sort of bird it was.
As luck, or preparation would have it, my Z9 and 600pf were sitting in the front seat, so I grabbed it to get a closer look and see what sort of bird it might be...more in the line of using the camera as a spotting scope than taking a photo, due to the distance. Just wasn't a shot that I'd normally take given the bird occupying only 10-15% of the frame height.
I took 3 shots handheld in Single Point AF mode at 1/200th and f8...great light due to the bird facing directly into the morning sun, clear skies and very low humidity. Subject detection was off, as is the case with Single Point AF. And yes, it's a house wren...no wonder it was chattering!
After checking the shots in the VF, I wasn't impressed, but planned to have a look on my edit system when I got home. I was actually kind of shocked to see that there was much more detail than I expected from what I saw on the VF. These were processed in DxO PL7 and tried to optimize the detail without going overboard.
The images inserted here are a crop to UHD (3840x2160) resolution for optimum display on a 4K monitor. JPG quality is around 85% to fit this site limitations, but the Flickr link has jpgs that are 100% quality setting and without the resizing that occurs on BCG. My purpose in sharing these is that I feel they're a good example of what this lens is capable of when its capabilities near the limits are not obscured by atmospherics, improper settings and such. Given what I've learned, I'll be more inclined to take shots like these under the RIGHT conditions.
Cheers!
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