grumpybadger
Alan Rickman
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- Paul Beastall
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As some of you will be aware, I was struggling to get the hang of birds in flight using the 7D. I had the chance to do some pretty intensive tests of the camera last week and I am much happier with the results I am getting now. In each case, I have added a 100% (1:1) full crop in the bottom left hand corner. When you think how demanding that is from a pixel density point of view, then hopefully you'll agree these show promise. Each is with a different lens.
First two shots are wild from Norfolk and the third was taken at the Hawk Conservancy, near Andover.
1. Barn Owl just after dawn

EOS-7D, EF 500 f/4L IS, tripod, Acratech Long Lens head
This shot was at ISO800 early last Wednesday morning. Using single AF with assist points (and off centre which non 1-series cameras have struggled with in the past)
2. Turnstones

EOS-7D, EF 70-200 f/4L IS, handheld
I'm pretty impressed with this as the turnstones were against a challenging background. This was using spot AF.
3. Captive Black Kite

EOS-7D, EF 400mm f/4DO IS, handheld
I know the kite looks a touch soft but I am sure that is motion blur - I was only running 1/640s and with a 400mm lens and a 1.6 crop, that is pretty demanding for a fast bird in flight. This was using AF with assist points on.
I think the 7D is certainly staying. It still cannot offer the sublime image quality I get from my 1DsII (I've been using the 7D a lot and had forgotten just how good the 1Ds is) but the light weight, better batteries and crop factor mean it is a great option to have alongside the Ds.
I hope this is useful to people and I will continue to post review comments as I find out more.
Paul
First two shots are wild from Norfolk and the third was taken at the Hawk Conservancy, near Andover.
1. Barn Owl just after dawn

EOS-7D, EF 500 f/4L IS, tripod, Acratech Long Lens head
This shot was at ISO800 early last Wednesday morning. Using single AF with assist points (and off centre which non 1-series cameras have struggled with in the past)
2. Turnstones

EOS-7D, EF 70-200 f/4L IS, handheld
I'm pretty impressed with this as the turnstones were against a challenging background. This was using spot AF.
3. Captive Black Kite

EOS-7D, EF 400mm f/4DO IS, handheld
I know the kite looks a touch soft but I am sure that is motion blur - I was only running 1/640s and with a 400mm lens and a 1.6 crop, that is pretty demanding for a fast bird in flight. This was using AF with assist points on.
I think the 7D is certainly staying. It still cannot offer the sublime image quality I get from my 1DsII (I've been using the 7D a lot and had forgotten just how good the 1Ds is) but the light weight, better batteries and crop factor mean it is a great option to have alongside the Ds.
I hope this is useful to people and I will continue to post review comments as I find out more.
Paul