AF-S Zoom-NIKKOR 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6G IF-ED + Kenko TelePlus MC7 900mm; 1/5 s @ f/11.0, ISO 800 |
Same image, no teleconverter. AF-S Zoom-NIKKOR 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6G IF-ED 450mm; 1/25 s @ f/5.6, ISO 800 |
Fast forward to the present, and the laws of physics are still the same. A 2x teleconverter still adds two stops of exposure and amplifies every tiny movement of the camera, making handheld shooting a challenge. Only now we have autofocus and image stabilization, and the Kenko TelePlus MC7 supports them both.
The TelePlus MC7 is an enormous value. It has quality optics (the MC7 stands for multicoated, 7-elements), and works exactly as you’d expect, supporting both autofocus, and more importantly, image stabilization. It even reports the correct exposure and focal length in the EXIF data. It’s well-made, although like most lenses these days, the body is plastic.
Any teleconverter works best with a fast lens. Slower lenses don’t disable autofocus, but they make it work harder to the extent that it’s easier just to switch to manual focus. And, with the amount of accuracy required by the narrow depth of field, it’s debatable whether it can do a better job of focusing anyway.
But image stabilization really helps out here, even more than the autofocus. In fact, it actually assists the process; pressing and holding the shutter button halfway while focusing stabilizes the image and makes the process much easier.
One of the great advantages of the Kenko over the Nikon, besides the price, is the fact that it will work with any lens. And when I say any, I even mean DX lenses. Not only does my AF-S NIKKOR 50mm f/1.4G become a pretty nifty 150mm f/2.8, but my AF-S DX NIKKOR 35mm f/1.8G now becomes a 105mm f/3.5 and works perfectly (no vignetting) on a full-frame camera as a 70mm f/3.5!
What was truly amazing was how well the Samyang 500mm f/8.0 Mirror Lens responded. The contrast was slightly lower, but the image remained amazingly sharp.
Phoenix/Samyang 500mm f/8.0 Mirror Lens + Kenko TelePlus MC7 AF 2.0X DGX Teleconverter 1500mm; 0.5 s @ f/16, ISO 800 |
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