Canon rf600 or Canon rf100-400 with 1.4x on an R7

Discussion in 'Canon Lens Discussion' started by dpmonk, Jan 13, 2023.

  1. dpmonk

    dpmonk New Member

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    Jan 11, 2023
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    Equipment:
    Canon Eos R7, Canon R100-400, Canon R18-150
    Wife has us signed up for a hike up a mountain in Big Bend to see the rare Colima Warbler. I am no pro, just a hobby, but shooting at a distance is a real possibility. I am tempted by the rf600 but wonder if the 1.4x teleconverter with the 100-400 may work as well on my R7. Both would give about the same focal length and similar aperture but not carrying the extra lens up that 5 mile mountain would help. Has anyone used the 1.4x on an Rf100-400? Which would give the best quality?
     

  2. Craig Sherriff

    Craig Sherriff Well-Known Member Site Supporter

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    60D,350D 1dmark3, T70, AV1, lenses ranging from 28mm to 600 mm, canonet Junior, Canonet QL 25, Mamiya C3 and 3 lens sets,Mamiya 645 pro TL and 3 lenses.Mamiya universal press camera and 4 lenses, Mamiya RB67 Pro S and 5 lenses, Pentax MG and various lenses, Toyoview 4 * 5 inch large format camera,Calimat C1 8*10 inch ultra large format camera.
    dpmonk, may I suggest you put your quiery to either Johnsey or Caladina as they are knowledgeable in this area.
    to do this click on members, then click on their name.
    A window with "write something will come up".
    Write your quiery there if they have not gotten back to you with a reply from "New Posts".
     
    Last edited: Jan 14, 2023
  3. Caladina

    Caladina Well-Known Member

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    Canon 18-45mm m, Canon 18-150mm m, Canon 55-200mm m, Canon 22mm m, Canon 28mm m macro,
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    7artisans 7.5mm m, Laowa 100mm macro ef, laowa 9mm zeroD m, Vintage M42 Lenses:
    Ashi Super - Takumar 1.8 / 55mm,
    the rf 100-500mm
    imo extenders should be seen as a bonus item for a bit of extra reach not really a main way to get the reach you need
    the best on fast constant aperture primes and zooms, not so good on variable focal zooms
    good on bright objects like the moon, or on bright sunny days, not so good on dull days

    personally i don't really see the benefit from a 1.4, i'd rather go with the x2 and as mentioned its a bonus item really
    the 2x works well on my ƒ2.8 zoom but the lens is very sharp to begin with

    check out his other vids
     
    Last edited: Jan 14, 2023
    dpmonk likes this.
  4. dpmonk

    dpmonk New Member

    Joined:
    Jan 11, 2023
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    3
    Equipment:
    Canon Eos R7, Canon R100-400, Canon R18-150
    I am a little afraid that on the crop sensor R7 a 2x on a 100-400 would actually be like 1280mm and thinking that may be too much without a tripod and also f22. I am leaning toward the rf600 which is f11 and would equal 960 focal length on full frame, right? Just curious if anyone has used either the 1.4 or 2x on the rf 100-400 with decent results.
     
  5. GDN

    GDN Well-Known Member

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    I know that it is not answering your question. But I have used an EF 400mm f5.6 L and an EF 1.4x extender on my RP, and it worked fine. Yes, the AF was slower, but it was accurate, and the images came out sharp.

    Gary
     
  6. johnsey

    johnsey Site Moderator Staff Member Site Supporter

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    5dMk4, 5dsR, 5dMk2, 20D, 70-200 2.8L IS, 100mm 2.8 Macro USM, 50mm 1.4, 85mm 1.8, 17-40mm 4.0L, TS-E 24mm 3.5L II, Rokinon 14mm 2.8; Pixma Pro-100
    I would give the edge to the 100-400L its much faster at 5.6 than the f11 and you will normally want the speed in long lens, a converter will drop it down to f8 (1.4) or f11 (2x) but only when you use them. Also the lens is a zoom and should be optically superior, although with a convert it is probably pretty close. The 600mm is a nice price and i guess its pretty sharp for that price range and a non-l lens. But it is very slow at f11 ( you will be fighting to get light from the shutter and ISO) and also you don't get to zoom, so your cropping with your feet which is painful with such magnification, on the plus side it should be significantly more portable than the other setup, but I would consider it a 1 trick pony so you may find you only use it in very specific situations.
     

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