dmcginnis Posted August 17, 2015 Share Posted August 17, 2015 Greetings - I have a Sony A600 with the two kit lenses and want to use it for digiscoping with a Razor Vortex HD 20-60-85 spotting scope ( The scope by itself is marvelous! I also bought the camera adapter with it (http://www.vortexoptics.com/product/vortex-razor-hd-spotting-scope-digital-camera-adapter) and tried working with it last weekend taking photos of wolf pups in Yellowstone. It worked OK part of the time...but ended up being pretty frustrating because the camera did not always recognize the attached lens and when it did, the camera lens kept searching for a focus point. It worked some of the time...and then would change modes and search for a focus point. The lenses needed to be zoomed in quite far to avoid the vignetting in the image, so everything was very magnified. I tried the settings on P most of the time and kept raising the ISO so I could use a faster shutter speed; regardless, the photos were not sharp. I ended up moving to Scene mode and going to manual focus and that seemed to work better, but the images were still not well focused. BTW, I was using a good tripod that is capable of holding 20 pounds, so it was pretty steady, and I was using the 2-second delay to avoid camera shake due to my finger on the shutter release. I am wondering if I need a different lens to make this work. Do I need a macro lens? Perhaps, a fixed focal length lens? If I need a different lens to make this work, what suggestions do you have? Is there ia better camera setting to use, I would appreciate hearing about it. Any and all suggestions will be appreciated. Thanks! Dave Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Advertisement Posted August 17, 2015 Posted August 17, 2015 Hi dmcginnis, Take a look here Sony A6000 and digiscoping with Razor Vortex HD 20x60 - 85?. I'm sure you'll find what you were looking for!
Golem Posted August 17, 2015 Share Posted August 17, 2015 ` If "digiscoping", which I have never heard of, is the old routine of combining a camera-with-lens and a telescope-with-eyepiece, then problems and questionable result should be the norm. Once upon a time there were flat field eyepieces for such rigs. If you're not using such an eyepiece then perhaps stop beating yourself up. Also when a flat field eyepiece IS deployed, it is also a very good idea to use a flat field macro lens [iOW an actual macro lens] on the camera. Your post mentions zooming, AF, etc. All bad but at best such rigs are not for producing exhibition quality images. For forensic, documental proof, etc they can work well enuf. BTW, I followed the Razor link. Found this info [hint, hint]: Digital SLR Cameras (DSLR) Connect the Razor HD spotting scope to a DSLR camera body with a fixed 50 mm lens. The 50 mm lens of most digital cameras has a 52 mm thread, but you will need to choose the specific adapter ring that fits the threads of your DSLR camera lens. I also notice from the picture of the Razor scope that it has prisms in the optical path. Also bad. You mention that your tripod is capable of holding 20 lbs. A rickety folding lawn chair is capable of holding at least 100 lbs [hint, hint]. You mention using P-mode. IIRC when a camera lens is aimed into a scope eyepiece, the camera lens is to be kept wide open. So [iIRC] P-mode could be a problem, aperture-wise. ` Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
dmcginnis Posted August 18, 2015 Author Share Posted August 18, 2015 I heard back from the Vortex customer support that they recommend a 50mm f1.8 lens to go with their camera adapter and scope. They did not say anything about needing a macro...so I hope that the regular Sony 50mm 1.8 will work ok. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
nitro27 Posted March 18, 2016 Share Posted March 18, 2016 Hey there, i was searching the net and came across this old thread and was wondering how you got on with the lens? I am looking at getting the razor scope and the new version of the a6000 which is the a6300. Yer i guess just wondering which lens you went with and how it all works. Any info would be greatly appreciated Cheers Sent from my SM-G900I using Tapatalk Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
dmcginnis Posted April 4, 2016 Author Share Posted April 4, 2016 Hi nitro27 - I do use the Sony 50 mm 1.8 lens and it works just fine on the Razor scope. I use the Razor mounting brackets and all works well. I have been pleased with the setup. I am heading into Yellowstone next weekend to see what I can find with the setup. Cheers, Dave Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jady Posted April 4, 2017 Share Posted April 4, 2017 Newbie, I am reading this old post with interest because I hope to pair my Sony a7 with a Vortex scope. I clicked on the words Razor mounting brackets in your post because I don't know what I need to attach my camera to the scope but what came up looked like something you would attach to a wall to hold a security camera or something. Can you help to clarify? What is between your camera with the 50 mm lens and the scope? How does it attach? Thanks for your help! Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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