Yup, you want to test the life of your shutter, stick to swallows in flight! I got a couple on a tidal creek about a mile from my home & on a pond elsewhere. There not shy. Every now & then they would take a break & land within 5’-8’ of me on wall where of a walk path bridge or trees. But when they feed, they’re where the insects are. Rite after them is the Kingfisher. All that matters is that you’re happy with your setup. A1 down to 400 in focus or keepers total including things like position, etc.? Either way, that’s a 2.5% keeper percentage. Happy shooting.
Thank you for posting this. I’m thinking of switching to Nikon from Olympus. But a z6iii is a bit out of the range for me at this time (wouldn’t have enough for the lens!). Is the focusing in z6ii the same as z7ii? Better? Worse? Thanks for your time.
This is very helpful indeed….coz I’m just debating about this camera or if I need to spend more. Thanks for this video.
@@williamchan8866 Glad to hear it helps. Technique is really the key.
Yup, you want to test the life of your shutter, stick to swallows in flight! I got a couple on a tidal creek about a mile from my home & on a pond elsewhere. There not shy. Every now & then they would take a break & land within 5’-8’ of me on wall where of a walk path bridge or trees. But when they feed, they’re where the insects are. Rite after them is the Kingfisher. All that matters is that you’re happy with your setup. A1 down to 400 in focus or keepers total including things like position, etc.? Either way, that’s a 2.5% keeper percentage. Happy shooting.
Thank you for posting this. I’m thinking of switching to Nikon from Olympus. But a z6iii is a bit out of the range for me at this time (wouldn’t have enough for the lens!). Is the focusing in z6ii the same as z7ii? Better? Worse? Thanks for your time.
@@briancampbell5243 The Z6II and Z7II use the same AF algorithm.