• After witnessing the continued decrease of involvement in the SpotterNetwork staff in serving SN members with troubleshooting issues recently, I have unilaterally decided to terminate the relationship between SpotterNetwork's support and Stormtrack. I have witnessed multiple users unable to receive support weeks after initiating help threads on the forum. I find this lack of response from SpotterNetwork officials disappointing and a failure to hold up their end of the agreement that was made years ago, before I took over management of this site. In my opinion, having Stormtrack users sit and wait for so long to receive help on SpotterNetwork issues on the Stormtrack forums reflects poorly not only on SpotterNetwork, but on Stormtrack and (by association) me as well. Since the issue has not been satisfactorily addressed, I no longer wish for the Stormtrack forum to be associated with SpotterNetwork.

    I apologize to those who continue to have issues with the service and continue to see their issues left unaddressed. Please understand that the connection between ST and SN was put in place long before I had any say over it. But now that I am the "captain of this ship," it is within my right (nay, duty) to make adjustments as I see necessary. Ending this relationship is such an adjustment.

    For those who continue to need help, I recommend navigating a web browswer to SpotterNetwork's About page, and seeking the individuals listed on that page for all further inquiries about SpotterNetwork.

    From this moment forward, the SpotterNetwork sub-forum has been hidden/deleted and there will be no assurance that any SpotterNetwork issues brought up in any of Stormtrack's other sub-forums will be addressed. Do not rely on Stormtrack for help with SpotterNetwork issues.

    Sincerely, Jeff D.

Unfocused Lightning at Infinity

Joined
Mar 2, 2004
Messages
2,404
Location
Northern Colorado
Here's a question to you lightning photographers...

I'm enjoying a crazy week down here in Arizona and was plagued with an issue tonight. The storms of interest were far enough away where I had to bust out the 70-300mm lens. On the LCD screen, my images looked fine, but when sent to the computer, I noticed many of them were out of focus at lengths greater than 150mm (give or take). With the abundance of shots I took tonight, I was fairly disappointed to see those results. Fortunately the lightning was very vanilla, thus I didn't lose out on any shots-of-a-lifetime.

The camera, a Nikon D40x; the lens, a Nikkor 70-300mm. It was tripoded and I've eliminated motion as a possible cause. Anyone know why at infinity, the lightning bolts were out-of-foucs and anyone have suggestions, experience, or advice on this?

Thanks!!!
 
Not sure if this is the same problem I have had, but I have had similar results with the Canon 20D as well. The best cure I have found so far is to focus on somekind of lighted subject......a town, a lighted billboard, a couple of street lights in the distance......with the autofocus, after the focus is locked on to the object you focused on, turn the AF off, and then shoot the pictures. This has worked well for the most part for me when there was something to focus on. When I am in the middle of nowhere with nothing to focus on, I had the very same results you got. Hope this helps.
 
Sometimes I've found that if you move the focus clear past infinity, essentially as far as it goes, that the pictures will still be out of focus. So Eric has the right idea here in find an object that the AF can work on in the distance and set the focus on that. Those zoom lenses are especially touchy with focus distances...
 
With Nikon lenses, if you go all the way to infinity the pics will be out of focus. The way nikon designs their lenses is to leave room for expansion from heat and cold, therefore if you go all the way to the edge on infinity you are actually focusing past infinity, that is why your images are out of focus. I usually put the focus mark right in the center of the infinity symbol. If you focus further than that the pics will be out of focus.
 
ditto Hank. Infinity is only infinity at the perfect temperature.

Also check hyperfocal distance on wikipedia...you may want to increase your fstop. That being said, I am terrible with numbers unless they are 1, 1.4, 2, 2.8, 4, 5.6, 8, 11, 16, or 22. :)
 
Back
Top