My first professional-level lens, for a long time I shot on a Canon 55-250 entry-level telephoto lens (in the second photo you can compare the sizes of these two glasses). Iβm not overjoyed at the constant aperture of 2.8, I can finally shoot normally in full manual mode, and not in shutter priority. Yes, at first it was very unusual to carry such a bandura with you, now the backpack has become noticeably heavier than before and I begin to understand those photographers who complain about the heaviness of the equipment (after all, when you have only a carcass in your backpack from something more or less heavy, and Since all lenses are entry-level plush, itβs hard to understand those who wear 3 heavy glasses plus some kind of FF brick). After a couple of months, I began to notice that the glass frankly smears in continuous shooting, with 7-9 photos taken from the same distance and angle, 2-3 can be in sharpness, and the rest move out of focus to the background or foreground, I began to be disappointed, because often I had to be content with blurry shots because it was impossible to constantly check the footage on the spot. I sent the glass for adjustment to a service center, where they ated the firmware and calibrated it on the test camera as possible, but these misses continued on my camera. Just yesterday, I once again looked into the instructions, where it is written that in some cases the included stabilizer during continuous shooting can only make things worse and it is better not to keep it always on. Followed the advice and voila, so far I have not seen any mistakes. Sometimes it's good to look at the instructions. All ringing sharpness!
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