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Little help please
Posted: Fri Jul 06, 2018 8:27 am
by Bnnunn1
As title suggest. Could anyone help me? I am going to fairford next week but am unsure of what settings to use on my camera. Would like to get inflight pictures.I have a nikon d5300 and sigma 70-300 lens. Any help greatly appreciated.
Thank you
Ben
Re: Little help please
Posted: Fri Jul 06, 2018 8:39 am
by TREBAX_RAVEN
Hi ben, here are the settings i usually use for doing most airshow stuff.
for fast jets and stuff;
shutter speed; 1/1000
aperture; f5.6-f8
ISO; i generally leave it in auto.
auto focus; AFC (auto focus continues)
for propeller driven aircraft;
shutter speed; 1/250
aperture; f5.6-f8
ISO; again leave it in auto
Auto focus; same again.
these settings should get you some nice sharp images of the fast jets and get you some nice prop blur on propeller driven stuff.
Re: Little help please
Posted: Fri Jul 06, 2018 8:50 am
by herc15
hey thats the same set up i used to have.
be careful with leaving your ISO on auto as it tends to pump it it mega high wreaking your images.i suggest anything from ISO 100-400 but it just depends on the conditions. have a play with the settings i would and be aware that 1/250 without being able to pan can lead to loads of blurry photos.
Re: Little help please
Posted: Fri Jul 06, 2018 10:58 am
by Green133
Agree with Herc15.Put a limit on the auto iso. I learned the hard way once at RIAT when just starting out. If you get chance get some practise in with flying birds before you go next week.
Re: Little help please
Posted: Sun Jul 08, 2018 7:57 am
by Wallace
There's nothing like leaving things to the last minute.
Short of advising you to get out and practice on anything that moves then learn from your mistakes, I would suggest setting the camera on Auto or P modes and hoping for the best and do not be too disappointed by the lack of results.
Re: Little help please
Posted: Sun Jul 08, 2018 9:57 am
by Nighthawke
Afraid I'm with Wallace on this one - you have left it a bit late. Panning is a skill that takes time to develop - if ever for some. However not wishing to dampen your spirits too much, use whatever time you have to get out and photograph anything that moves if you still want in-flight shots. As already inferred, expect little and anything else is a bonus. At least with digital you can shoot, shoot, shoot with no cost except time afterwards.
Hope you have a great Fairford and hopefully get some good shots.
Re: Little help please
Posted: Mon Jul 09, 2018 9:11 am
by Supra
Valid advice from pawlee1, but remember that "you can't polish a turd". There must be the semblance of a decent sharp image to start the process!
Comments on other advice so far-
a] Don't ever use P (programme) or A (auto) on flying subjects. You have no time to review the results & the opportunity to get 'that' shot again!
b]AV Aperture priority. For Jets & fast-movers, even parachutists, set the aperture to
'sweet spot' of lens (sharpest according to testers comments), which is usually f8 +/- & take the highest shutter-speed it gives you. Be looking for minimum 1/1000. I personally would manually raise the ISO to achieve that, rather than use a non-professional lens at maximum aperture (f4?)
c]TV Shutter Priority. Set shutter speed; 1/250 for slow prop/rotor aircraft. Set 1/400 for high-speed props. Manually set 125 ISO for fine sunny weather. Up to 400 ISO if overcast. DON'T use auto ISO. Allow ISO & desired shutter-speed dictate the aperture, Could be up to f18 (great!). Monitor aperture to have minimum f5.6-f8. Light or dark images can be post-processed to adjust brightness, PP. doesn't make a blurry shot sharp!
d] I'm not familiar with your set-up, but your equipment should yield acceptable results with ease. You will be short of reach on fast jets once airborne, but a 'sharp' image can be cropped-in!
e}
DON'T forget to swop between AV & TV mode for the next item! We all do sometimes & it's Bl**dy annoying.
Hope that helps. Stand well back from a road (50+ metres?) with fast-moving traffic to replicate air-show speed/distance, preferably with the sun on the side you see & use the above info' to hone your experience & panning skills. Shoot until your sick, that'll help you at this late stage. Good Luck

Re: Little help please
Posted: Fri Jul 13, 2018 3:01 pm
by Bnnunn1
Thank you so much 633 Squadron and Herc15 for your help much appreciated. this was my first chance to practice on aircraft. here's a few of my results
DSC_0285 by
Ben Nunn, on Flickr
DSC_0176 by
Ben Nunn, on Flickr
DSC_0119 by
Ben Nunn, on Flickr
DSC_0042 by
Ben Nunn, on Flickr
DSC_0114 by
Ben Nunn, on Flickr
Any comments welcome

Re: Little help please
Posted: Fri Jul 13, 2018 7:37 pm
by xkekeith
Great start...love the Typhoon & Atlantic, Keep going!
Could try a slower shutter speed for the props to give a bit more blurr...
Re: Little help please
Posted: Fri Jul 13, 2018 9:07 pm
by Bnnunn1
Ok thank you very much. Will try that sunday when im back at RIAT.

Re: Little help please
Posted: Sat Jul 14, 2018 1:17 pm
by Supra
Okay! Your fast-movers are fine. Please re-read my paragraph (c) above to master 'Props & Rotors' which are 60% of your posted shots. Good Luck. Brilliant start!
Re: Little help please
Posted: Sun Jul 15, 2018 6:53 pm
by herc15
No worries mate, any time, good to be able to help someone out. looks like you have some real crackers there, well done!