Jump to content

Good Canon L lens + Speed Booster performance on a6300


rweissman
 Share

Recommended Posts

I have acquired a Canon EF to Sony mount  Metabones Speed Booster (latest version) and tried it with the A6300, on my two standard "smaller" Canon lenses, the Canon 24-70 L IS f4 and the 70-200 L IS f4. Overall, the combination performed superbly and focused only slightly slower than my normal Metabones Canon to Sony adapter Mark IV.  Key findings:

 

1) Most of the time (90%+) focus was obtained quickly without hunting. Fast enough--though I did not check continuous focus with fast moving objects as I rarely need that mode for the work I do (events, portraits, theatrical productions). I'm not a sports shooter so can't judge how well this combo performs here.

2) Occasionally, particularly when first turning on the camera, a bit of hunting occurred but subsequent shots (even at very different distances) were generally quick.

3) In good light, including indoors, or lower light at ISO 6400 (which still looks great!) focusing was quick--not a lightening fast as using a Metabones IV--but certainly fast enough. Not much hunting at all, except in low light. Even then, many shots involved no hunting.

4) In Lightroom (latest version released  this week with native support for A6300 raw), metadata mis-identifies Canon lenses as their Sony equivalents, but manually selecting Canon lenses applied lens corrections reliably. 

5) These f4.0 lightweight Canon lenses (compared to F2.8 versions) did become effectively 2.8 lenses; this is particularly nice with the 70-200 L f4, as the native 2.8 is a beast. 

6) If I want 'normal' focal lengths, I can use the Speed Booster. For extra reach, I can use the standard Metabones adapter. This is terrific flexibility.

7) As you'd expect, there's no comparison between the Canon 24-70F4 with any of Sony's APS-C standard lenses for the A6300. The Canon is simply superb.  And the Canon 70-200 feels lighter and operates more smoothly than the Sony 70-200 f4 (which I also use), and, of course, on the Speed Booster, keeps its normal range AND becomes an effective f2.8.

 

I could not be more delighted with these results. The Canon 24-70 L IS f4 will become my standard lens when using the A6300. While large, it is not overly large nor overly heavy.  A great combo. Frankly, I was pleasantly surprised, given reports of slow focusing on the 6000.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Both. The design goal is to provide a one stop or near one stop improvement in dof reduction and improved light gathering. See metabones' white paper. Numerous analysts have confirmed these claims. For me, the biggest value is using a full frame lens and reducing the crop factor from 1.5x to 1.07x. A 35mm full frame lens on a 6300 crop sensor is usually rendered as a 52mm lens. Using a speed booster It is becomes approximately a 35mm lens (actually a 37mm lens) --much closer to the original full frame intent.

Link to post
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...

What do you mean it becomes an effective f/2.8, you mean as an f/2.8 lens would exposure wise or DoF wise, on your ASP-C?

 

Speed booster is a crop factor negator, meaning FOV and DoF is made almost like the original lens would on it natural sensor size (usually FF). IT's also works be focusing the total light onto the smaller sensor, intensifying the light meaning you gather almost the same amount of light so you ISO will be lowered and SNR will be almost equalised.

 

Speed booster is not magic, you will not gain a stop compared to FF but you will negated the crop factor (almost). It's basically a reversed teleconverter, getting a wider FOV instead of a small, gaining light intensity instead of loosing it.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

  • Posts

    • I'd really like to find a package deal for an a7R (mk I, second generation) which includes the neckstrap and box. I've searched Ebay and currently no one is listing what I'm looking for. They either have the camera only or a first generation a7R and a lot of them don't offer the Sony neckstrap or box it came in. I know your site doesn't have a formal 'Equipment For Sale' thread and granted Ebay is a better place to sell gear but I thought I'd see if any of the members have one and would like to upgrade to a newer model but don't think anyone would be looking for one that old. The cameras I've been using are in the 20 megapixel range and rather than jumping to a 40mp camera due to file size, the 36mp that the first a7R has was appealing to me and wouldn't break the bank. I've been using Canon and Nikon but really want experience a Sony. If a post like this is undesirable for this website, I understand but I thought I would ask. Thank you. 
    • Here's a good thread on the issue.... https://www.dpreview.com/forums/thread/4571046 And here is the info on the A7RIVA that maybe explains why I don't see the issue...  The change in wording that caught my attention is that the new A7RIVA brochure says the structure has been "re-examined and redesigned." Don't know, but given the text of other parts of the brochures are copied word for word, the change in text here seems significant. My reading of this is that it is a redesign of the A7RIV. In that case, perhaps the 200-600 issues are less severe with the new body.
    • I'd opt for a small zoom, but I must admit that there seems to be a dearth of lenses in the e-mount in the 24-50mm range -- for some reason.  I have a small 24-70mm, but that's an a-mount Tamron.  Maybe you can find something by looking at lenses slightly longer.  I have a heavy, but small 24-100mm a-mount, and Tokina made a 24-200mm a-mount.  Maybe there are similar lenses in the e-mount.  Kill three birds with one stone.
  • Topics

×
×
  • Create New...