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sent on July 06, 2022 (14:12) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)
I am leaving on Saturday for Namibia from Etosha to the Zambezi region. I have two camera bodies: A1 and A7RIV As optics I have the 12-24 F4 and new 24-70 and 70-200 GM II and the 200-600 (1.4 and 2.0 ready). For me the second body should not be backup, but a machine on which to mount the second lens. You may happen to be 70 mm long (at least for elephants that you could have at 5 m and they are really large). Maybe the 70-200 and the 300 mm overlap a little (bad they do not hurt but I always think about the compromise between focal length and weight of the backpack). For birdlife even with a possible 100-400 you may be short. I will also have my wife in tow and I have assigned her the OM1 with the 40-150 and the 300. The micro 4/3 sensor will have its limitations but seeing the equivalent focal lengths ranging from 80 to 600 mm in a backpack that is a third of the Sony one is a pleasure. Io parto sabato per la Namibia da Etosha alla regione dello Zambesi. Ho due corpi macchina: A1 e A7RIV Come ottiche ho il 12-24 F4 e nuovi 24-70 e 70-200 GM II e il 200-600 (1,4 e 2,0 pronti). Per me il secondo corpo non deve essere di backup, ma una macchina sulla quale montare la seconda ottica. Ti potrà capitare di essere lungo con i 70 mm (almeno per gli elefanti che potresti avere a 5 m e sono davvero grandi). Forse il 70-200 e il 300 mm si sovrappongono un poco (male non fanno ma penso sempre al compromesso tra lunghezza focale e peso dello zaino). Per avifauna anche con un eventuale 100-400 potresti essere corto. Anche io avrò la moglie al seguito e le ho assegnato la OM1 con il 40-150 e il 300.
Il sensore micro 4/3 avrà i suoi limiti ma vedere le focali equivalenti che vanno da 80 a 600 mm in uno zainetto che è un terzo di quello Sony è una goduria.