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Hello from Melbourne Australia 🐳
Hi Terri! Great to have you with us. A warm welcome to Waterpixels. If you're looking for specific advice on the Sony system, by all means search our site or post a question in the relevant forum. I'm sure you'll get lots of help. Best wishes
- Today
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Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
Wow. Thank you for posting this!
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Diving with the Weefine 3000 CCW Ring Light
It seems like this could be a great thing for blackwater on a 30mm M43?
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Hello from Melbourne Australia 🐳
Hi all. I have been diving for about 40 yrs. Do technical, cave and muck diving. I am after advice about moving to a Sony Full frame mirrorless set up I dive a lot of the Pacific as well as caves in Europe and US
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Terri joined the community
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Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
Terrifying, thanks for the vivid retelling and cautionary tale. It would be great to keep the data from the trip but better to keep the family safe.
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UW Photo Mag is over after this issue
At least we have Alex and Matt and the Underwater Photography Show to get an underwater camera fix 😀. As soon as my wife hears that intro music she gets up and leaves the room, "if you are going to listen to that again, I am going to go read a book!" I keep trying to explain to her there is more than one episode, ha.
- Yesterday
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Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
Thanks for sharing the account and reminding about not being complacent about alarms and not worrying about possessions. Great that the operator did well in handling it. Lucky it was not in the middle of the night or out at sea in windy conditions.
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Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
I use a little printed memory card wallet to store 10 numbered SD Cards. I put a big 500gb CFExpress card in my camera as primary and a 128 or 64gb SD Card as secondary. I swap in a new SD Card at the end of each day and download from that. The SD Cards act as a backup should the camera or laptop be lost. Many modern cameras have two slots, so this should be easy to do for most people. It would be smart to leave this in a dry-bag/go-bag on the deck or camera station of a liveaboard. I think I'll add this to my liveaboard routine!
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Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
What a terrible experience, Tim. Thank you for sharing your story--it is one to learn from and live by. We were on the Philippines Siren last month, and during the very solid safety briefing, the CD offered to put passports in her jump bag, which stayed at the bridge, which on that boat is at the muster station. We didn't take her up on it, but should've done--and will if offered again. In fact, I might suggest it if the crew doesn't. Thinking about the loss of belongings, it occurred to me that on our next LOB--in July, as it happens--I hope to rotate one of the memory cards out of the camera every day or two, and keep it in my jump bag with passports, cash, meds, etc. The photographs are less than insignificant in the grand scheme, but having them might take on new meaning under the circumstances.
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Caroliineyy joined the community
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Transition to Mirrorless - screen vs EVF
I recently (yesterday) put the original DSLR 45 degree viewfinder on my A7RIII and it definitely goes through more battery. But I prefer using it so far after just one wide angle dive. The older viewfinder doesn't show the edges where the settings are that well unless I adjust my angle of view. But for now it was worth getting the older unit at a major discount to see if it's what I want to use. I'm sure macro will be a different challenge.
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UW Photo Mag is over after this issue
I recorded an interview with Peter for the UWP Show.
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Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
Sometime in the early 80s I did a marine fire fighting course. Mock-up of a ship, two decks and two compartments on each deck. A small wood fire in one of the lower compartments. Using breathing apparatus and fireman’s suit we had to go in and search for a ‘body’. Couldn’t see a hand in front of your face and the deck was too hot to stand still on. We all ended up with minor burns even with all the kit. Without the BA sets you would have zero chance of getting out.
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Flip holder or Bayonet system? Nauticam - Macro wet lenses
Update... Got to play with my new MFO3 on a recent trip to Maldives. What a FUN way to get a fish "portrait" lens! And what a NEW headache = trying to photo male anthias with full fin extension in water column with nice bokeh or blue backgrounds! LOL And, I discovered that the single flip Nauticam holder I own that I thought had become "one" with a Nauticam 87 port actually was easily removed - DOH! Well - Now all geared up for bayonet OR single flip AND headed to that online ordering for a Nauticam dual flip! I really can see where having both an SMC1 and an MFO3 on in Lembeh would be advantageous.
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FS: Nikon 60mm macro lens with Nauticam N120 Macro port 60
That whole setup was sold back in January.
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Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
- Sony 100 mm macro
Hi @hellhole , You nailed it! Yes, the SMC and CMC significantly reduces both the working distance and depth of the actual focus window. In short, they allow you to fill the frame with a tiny nudibranch or similar by requiring the user to be incredibly close to the subject. Hence the term “Super Macro.” With that said, because the depth of the focal plane is so narrow, the slightest micro movement is the difference between an incredibly sharp awe-inspiring image and an out-of-focus miss. This is especially true with the SMC-2 on the 100 or 90, as an example. Add a TC and its an exponential level of difficulty. I know someone that has truly mastered macro and now uses the new 100, TC, and SMC-2. His work is outstanding! He also devoted countless dives over many years honing his skills to use such a precise setup. His suggestion is to master the macro lens. Then add a TC or SMC and master that. Lastly, experiment with them combined. Incremental steps reduces frustration, builds on experience, and delivers positive results. Hope this helps! Chip- Sony 100 mm macro
Hello I am trying to understand ... What is the difference between using wet lens option with the 100mm... Vs using 1.4x /2x on the lens. F stop to me.. matter less.. as I want to shoot at high f stop anyway. Does the working distance change if I use wet lens vs using 1.4x/2x?- Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
As all have said, very glad you are safe. That still must have been traumatic. I appreciate the description of the process and the warnings. As a hospital-based physician, I have heard hundreds of fire alarms in my career. None have been real and serious, and I have become complacent. I cannot imagine the consequences of a major fire.Adrian Gresores started following Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise- Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
First off, I am glad Tim and everyone else escaped. There must be an enormous temptation to "just nip inside" for passport, wallet and $X,000 of camera system. Every time I hear of a boat fire or sinking on a reef, I am shocked by how often I realise I have dived from the boat concerned. Is that a statistical thing, or just a bit of sub-conscious psychology and my mind kidding me? Same for how often we hear of boat fires, reef sinking and capsizes. Has the frequency increased, or is it just better reporting now we have the internet? I did a tour of a boatyard in Egypt where Red Sea dive boats of all sizes are built and repaired. Most are constructed of wood frames and planks, covered with thin sheets of ply and an epoxy based paint to achieve that polished hull look. By contrast, in 'pure' GRP construction the hull is usually moulded as one or more panels, then joined and strengthened with ply or composite frames. I would guess that there are many hybrid variations, especially once repairs are taken into account. The inside fit with both constructions will be predominantly wood. I doubt if there is much difference in flammability, toxicity or unstoppable progress once a fire gets established in the basic structure.- Transition to Mirrorless - screen vs EVF
I tend to stick to the viewfinder, even when shooting wide-angle (I'm not using an external monitor), and when reviewing pictures. But I do need to switch back to the main screen to change some settings, as it shows more information. One key setting - on the A1, I can select the EVF fps. I don't recall the exact fps on top of my head but it could be 60 / 120 / 240fps. While the highest setting is the nicest and smoothest... it also uses a LOT more battery. I'm typically reverting down to the lowest setting when diving, and can get 2 to 3 dives depending on bottom time and how many shots I took.- Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
Thanks Hugues.- Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
Hi Tim Happy you are ok and all other person on the boat also. Thanks for the warning NEVER go back to the cabin. Hugues- Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
Not just fibreglass, I guess. Cladding, all sorts of stuff. You sure do not want to breath this stuff in. It was truly noxious.- Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
So glad to hear you are ok Tim!!- Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
Glad you and everyone on board made it out ok. Material loss is terrible, but it clearly could have been much worse. And thanks for the experienced advice. I didn’t know that about fibreglass, even though I’ve worked on boats. Definitely something to keep in mind. Thanks again, and best of luck with everything ahead. - Sony 100 mm macro
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