feathersfinsphotos Posted May 5, 2024 Posted May 5, 2024 I'm interested in using Nauticam wet lenses with the Sony full-frame gear I already own (I just need the housing), but I also looked into Nauticam's Canon R50 setup. With a fixed flat port, it looks like you'd really want to use it with additional wet lenses. The potential appeal to me is that I suspect the Canon R50's autofocus will be better than my A7Riii. Does anyone have experience or thoughts on the Nauticam Canon R50 setup?
Sam weekly Posted May 6, 2024 Posted May 6, 2024 I own this set up and also have the nauticam wide angle lens nauticam cmc and smc attached by bayonet very happy with it, that being said not being able to change ports could be an issue for some(not me) 1 1
feathersfinsphotos Posted May 6, 2024 Author Posted May 6, 2024 Can I ask you a bunch of questions about it? You're able to raise and lower the pop up flash, right? How is the autofocus with your additional lenses? For context, I'm diving in pretty green cold water, but could use a focus light if needed. My wish is to use this with the WWL and MWL, primarily for static reef scenes. How is battery life using the flash?
Sam weekly Posted May 8, 2024 Posted May 8, 2024 Yes the flash pops up l have no issues with the autofocus and much faster than the olympus epl10 i previously had i usually do a single dive of about 1;45 minutes in shallow water and never had an issue that being said i really dont ask 4 much 1
Drtalks Posted September 18, 2024 Posted September 18, 2024 Curious on your experience with the CMC - 1 (?) and the R50 setup. Have you used it much and like the results ? Thanks.
puttsk Posted March 22 Posted March 22 I used R50 with CMC-1 and I'd say I like the combination. Image quality is quite good and you have enough room for cropping at 24MP. Following is the image I got from R50 and CMC-1 from my latest dive in Thailand. null
Nemrod Posted March 25 Posted March 25 I sort of like this concept for the new Canon R50 and the new little Nikon. Fixed port with water contact optics. But I do wish it had BBF and an additional auxiliary bulkhead port so it might be possible to have both a vacuum system and onboard charging. What is the flash sync speed for this R50? Looks like a nice outfit, hope it does good for you.
dhaas Posted March 25 Posted March 25 Owned the Canon R50 for a few months and still exploring if one rear button can be mapped to back button focus start. Personally I don't find the "feel" of the Nauticam NA-R50 housing trigger and spring tension difficult to 1/2 lock and then shoot. Flash synch speed is 1/250. Nice........ As to having a port for vacuum AND another to rig a data transfer / charging USB-C not likely.... Only one M16 port and my housing has the vacuum system in it. Works fine and popping the camera in an out is a breeze anyway. The housing fixed port hasn't been limiting since numerous macro 67mm choices out via Nauticam's 67mm / bayonet t adapter. For wide shooting a WWL-B, WWL-C lenses (likely a WWL-1 too just not sure of any fdifferences in corners, vignetting, etc. Possibly less expensive wet WA choices with less wide to zoom in full focus coverage, some vignetting, etc. depending what lens you try with the 67mm / bayonet ring. I'm realistic and don't expect WWL-B or WWL-C total quality in this silly experiments. I'll try various ideas mid-April in North Florida's clear freshwater springs and share some pics 🙂 David Haas
Nemrod Posted March 25 Posted March 25 David, cannot wait to see your new outfit at SD. JFYI and please anyone correct me if wrong. The only difference between the Nauticam WWL-1 and the Nauticam WWL-1B is the removable foam float collar on the WWL-1 and the integral aluminum float collar on the WWL-1B. Optically and in all dimensions not affected by the float collar, they are the same lens. The WWL-C is a different lens, more compact and is not the same optically. The WWL-1 lens assumes a 28mm and the WWL-C assumes a 24mm lens and both have zoom through capability. The WWL-C may not be as wide with some camera/lens combos? 2
Chris Ross Posted March 26 Posted March 26 10 hours ago, Nemrod said: David, cannot wait to see your new outfit at SD. JFYI and please anyone correct me if wrong. The only difference between the Nauticam WWL-1 and the Nauticam WWL-1B is the removable foam float collar on the WWL-1 and the integral aluminum float collar on the WWL-1B. Optically and in all dimensions not affected by the float collar, they are the same lens. The WWL-C is a different lens, more compact and is not the same optically. The WWL-1 lens assumes a 28mm and the WWL-C assumes a 24mm lens and both have zoom through capability. The WWL-C may not be as wide with some camera/lens combos? I believe the WWL-1 is m67 attachment while the WWL-1B has a built in Nauticam boyonet. 2
Chris Ross Posted March 26 Posted March 26 19 hours ago, Nemrod said: I sort of like this concept for the new Canon R50 and the new little Nikon. Fixed port with water contact optics. But I do wish it had BBF and an additional auxiliary bulkhead port so it might be possible to have both a vacuum system and onboard charging. What is the flash sync speed for this R50? Looks like a nice outfit, hope it does good for you. There is a solution to this to have the vacuum valve and bulkhead on the same m16 port, and offset extension valve from Nauticam, here, but sit down before you click on the link: https://www.backscatter.com/Nauticam-M16-Offset-Extension-with-Dual-Activation 3
Nemrod Posted March 26 Posted March 26 (edited) 2 hours ago, Chris Ross said: I believe the WWL-1 is m67 attachment while the WWL-1B has a built in Nauticam boyonet. Thanks, I had forgotten that. My WWL-1 has a Nauticam bayonet mount. I think it was added on, do not remember. It should zip right on the Z50 I would think. Edited March 26 by Nemrod 1
Proteus Posted Sunday at 01:08 AM Posted Sunday at 01:08 AM (edited) I've been wanting to down size for a while and decided to go with the R50 about a month back. I bought the "Pro" housing package from BlueWater Photo and was really happy with the transaction. I've not been diving with the unit yet, but I am really pleased with the housing / package. That said, I have a few nit picky comments. First, yes you can implement back button autofocus, BUT only as a reprogram on the "*" button (which is * / magnify button on the housing). I don't see where Canon provided the alternative on the other buttons (although there is a lot of other remapping available on the other buttons). I too found the trigger to have no "feel" to it and, if you reprogram the * / magnify you can't reach the reprogrammed button and trigger at the same time. My solution is to remove the add-on trigger. Once removed you can comfortably hold the back focus and click the shutter release. Removing the add-on trigger eliminates the soggy feel it gives and, with the reprogrammed button gives the desired function. Another weird issue is the functionality of the housing AF/MF button. Yes, pressing it lets you switch from AF to MF, but there is no way to MF once you do this!! Nauticam did not externalize the manual focus ring on the lens. The knob labeled as Zoom/Focus is really just a zoom knob. I wrote Nauticam about this and they mentioned that the user manual will someday be corrected. Of course, all their other housings allow the alternatives based on one's gear selection, but no such option exists for this rig. As noted above, the AF/MF button has an extensive set of Canon alternative functions so I guess I'll eventually find something I want for the button. The housing flash ON/OFF works beautifully and it's a nice feature. I was always wishing for an easy way to do this on my A7RV and never found it. I'd be interested in knowing if anyone has a way to get to an effective 100mm (full frame) lens. The existing is effectively 76mm. For fish portraits I'd like a bit more telephoto. I already have the CMC-2, so I'm OK for getting in very close but, of course, you pay a DOF penalty when the CMC and similar are used. Overall, seems like a nice alternative if you can manage the limitations. Gary Edited Sunday at 01:11 AM by Proteus 1
Chris Ross Posted Sunday at 06:29 AM Posted Sunday at 06:29 AM 5 hours ago, Proteus said: I'd be interested in knowing if anyone has a way to get to an effective 100mm (full frame) lens. The existing is effectively 76mm. For fish portraits I'd like a bit more telephoto. I already have the CMC-2, so I'm OK for getting in very close but, of course, you pay a DOF penalty when the CMC and similar are used. Overall, seems like a nice alternative if you can manage the limitations. Gary The only way I could see to achieve that would be to use a different lens, which is quite restrictive with the R50 housing. I think the only one that would fit is the 50mm f1.8 which would give you a fraction more reach at 80mm equivalent.
dhaas Posted yesterday at 01:09 PM Posted yesterday at 01:09 PM There's a feature built into the Canon R50 I have yet to play with on mine in the Nauticam NA-R50 housing. In Canon RED Menu tab there is Digital TeleConvertor feature of 2.0X and 4.0X. I have barely played with the 2.0X on the 45mm zoom end of the Canon RF-S 18-45mm IS STM lens. I'm pretty sure this only works in JPEG mode (have to find details in the 814 page Canon R50 PDF manual, LOL) to be sure. Still, if shooting through the NA-R50 flat port it could be what I call a "poor man's semi-close up" lens option. With today's software including sharpening, uprezzing, backscatter removal, etc. I contend shooting any photo is 50% capture / 50% editing to make photos shine 🙂 I'll try it while diving some Florida freshwater springs next week 🙂 David Haas
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