As to the developments, there is a new camera in the stable. For the football games, at night, the D500 and D850 did real well. I some time forget that that this is a hobby. The D500 was not built for 'under the lights' photography. That point is probably mentioned in the documentation. But it has a virtually unlimited buffer. I have never filled the buffer, even at 10 FPS shooting RAW. Technically the documentation says it will hold 200 shots. I never tested that. But the D500 with the crop sensor does much better in daylight. The D850 with the full frame sensor did very well at night, but it is built for portraits and landscapes. The 48 mp files fill up the buffer quickly. Yep, I lost a few shots.
Enter the D6. Built for sports, or action shooting. The 20 mp layout on a full frame sensor means the pixels are almost as big as a beach ball. Lets in a lot of light - and reduces the noise. What's not to like?
First, it is a bit pricey. I can deal with that. I looked at a used unit from KEH. I used KEH for a lens and was very happy with the transaction. That being said, a lens is not as complicated as a camera unit. And for a few $$$$s more, I could get a re-furbished unit from Nikon. And I get all the accessories, including the most outrageously priced Nikon sells, the battery charger. Easy decision.
The other minor decision is, why stay with DSLR and not move to a mirrorless system? Everyone has their opinion, here's mine that applies to me only. I have too much sunk into the system I have. If I was 10 years younger, I might change. My opinion is that adding an adapter between the lens and the camera (FTZ) won't help anything. And if I was going to move on to a mirrorless system, it would not be with Nikon. (Or Canon!) So a D6 it is.
I used the D6 for the rugby shots here. It did not disappoint in the daylight, nor did I expect it to. But it is here for night shots.
One other development in the past few weeks comes from the software world, and that is the introduction of Topaz's Photo AI. In summary, it uses AI for denoise and sharpen. In practice, I have found it useful for shots that need very little cleanup. So in the cases of the rugby and football shots, this application works well and has sped up the post processing. Not sure how it will go with the aircraft. So far, for past shots - not as well. The time will come later for real testing.
But for now, some football shots with the D6 and quick post processing.
Not sure how many more games there are this season, playoffs begin soon. Hopefully this team has a few more games to go.
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