VR Test

“Vibration Reduction”; Nikon’s tradename for optical image stabilization. The camera and lens sense the degree of camera motion, and deflect elements in the lens to cause counter-vailing motions, resulting (if it all works right) in a sharper image. They claim about a 3-stop improvement (in terms of lower shutter speeds usable hand-held).

The rule of thumb is that you can safely hand-hold the camera down to a shutter speed of 1/(focal length).  This is a 35mm rule of thumb, and it’s the 35mm-equivalent focal length that matters here.  So for a 200mm lens on a full-frame DSLR, the safe shutter speed (by rule of thumb) is 1/200 sec. Or, with VR, about 1/30.

The following test photos are small crops from the center of the frame, containing the focus point. They were all shot hand-held, free-standing (I wasn’t leaning against anything).

1/15 VR on
1/15 VR on
1/15 VR on
1/15 VR on
1/15 VR on
1/15 VR on
1/20 VR on
1/20 VR on
1/15 VR on
1/15 VR on
1/15 VR on
1/15 VR on
1/15 VR on
1/15 VR on

I score that as 1 and 2 acceptably sharp, the rest not.

And now some examples shot with VR off.

1/15 VR off
1/15 VR off
1/15 VR off
1/15 VR off
1/13 VR off
1/13 VR off
1/13 VR off
1/13 VR off
1/13 VR off
1/13 VR off
1/20 VR off
1/20 VR off
1/15 VR off
1/15 VR off
1/20 VR off
1/20 VR off

None of the VR off examples are acceptably sharp.

So; the VR off case certainly works as expected, no hope. The VR case produced two acceptably sharp photos a full 4 stops below where it should have been okay by rule of thumb. And a lot of failures, but I was seriously pushing the limits here.

Next post will be another run, a bit more careful, with 10 shots of the same test subject for each series. But this is getting long enough and ugly enough as it is.

“Playing Wilson Hicks”: The LIFE Photo Collection

As Scott Kirkpatrick asked, “Have you ever wondered what it would have been like to be Wilson Hicks, the picture editor of LIFE Magazine in its heyday?”

I think I’m done spamming my own blog with stuff from there, at least for the next hour or so. I’m a bit disappointed at my inability to find anything on Heinlein or Asimov. But then they’ve only got about 20% of the collection digitised so far, so there may still be hope. I suppose I should start a post on things I’ve tried without finding anything.