I'm sure this sounds a little lame, but I am a hobbyist and primarily photograph coins. I use Focus for stacking and have become reasonably proficient.
I'm getting my feet wet with Remote now. I understand my Tokina lens does not have a focussing motor, but I don't quite understand what functionality I'm actually losing because of that. Before I drop $1,000 or so on a new lens, could someone please enlighten me?
Thanks!
Steve
Tokina 100MM and Helicon Remote
Re: Tokina 100MM and Helicon Remote
Hello Steve,
The only difference beetwen a manual and AF lens is that the latter has a focusing motor, so it supports automated focus bracketing.
You could buy a macro rail for $300-400 and achieve automation that way with your manual lens. And it would be much more precise and allows for smaller steps - good for macro. For non-macro photography, e. g. landscape, an autofocus lens is the only solution since a macro rail is not suitable.
The only difference beetwen a manual and AF lens is that the latter has a focusing motor, so it supports automated focus bracketing.
You could buy a macro rail for $300-400 and achieve automation that way with your manual lens. And it would be much more precise and allows for smaller steps - good for macro. For non-macro photography, e. g. landscape, an autofocus lens is the only solution since a macro rail is not suitable.