Birthday Meal

spmc-1103April is Birthday month here for the Turner & Brown Clans.

This week while we have been all together as a family we have been celebrating various family birthdays.

It was also, despite our diet an excuse to have a meal out at the local Indian restaurant with our parents.  The local Indian restaurant is a particularly good one and well worth a visit if you are in Lincoln.

So a good Easter holiday but now its back to work and back to the diet.

Lets also hope for some better spring weather in order to practice some flower photography.

Changing a Bulb

Radiator Protection
Radiator Protection

You would think that a simple thing like changing a headlight bulb on a BMW R1200GS would be a relatively simple thing.  Its a practical bike designed for long distance travel.  People use them for journeys lasting months.  In most areas the design is excellent.

Well one part of the design is very frustrating and that is access to the low beam headlight.

Changing it is something I dread, I can get the bulb out but its a right struggle getting the new bulb back in.  There is very little room in which to move your hand.  I know some people who have resorted to removing the instrument cluster, and taking out the full headlight assembly so they can do it easier!

Please Bike Manufacturers, some of us are not just Summer Sunday riders, doing 50 mile fun trips now and again, we use are bikes all year round.  Tasks like changing a bulb should be simple and easy and you should be able to do it in the dark and cold by the side of the road.

Leica M (240) Imminent

Window Light, Leica M8, Summicron 35mm
Window Light, Leica M8, Summicron 35mm

The post the other day titled Leica Fan Boy was extremely fortuitous. I was checking Adobe’s website out and spotted a new Release Candidate for Adobe Lightroom. In the notes it stated that it supported the new Leica M (240). This means that Leica must have finalised the software, which means the camera is imminent.

Then just a few hours later I find out that the Leica Dealer who gave me such great service and sold me my Leica M8. would have a demo copy from Friday.

If your after trying out the new Leica M, contact Stephen Premier.

I wish I was lucky enough to afford a new Leica but I have to admit, I would be torn between the Leica Monochrom. the CCD sensor’ed M9P or the new M.

Choices for Photographers just keep getting better.

Bike Batteries

BMW-R1200RTFor touring Motorcycles I am alway surprised that a bigger heavy duty battery is not fitted.

While in the summer the only extra load is the GPS, in Winter it’s a different matter.

BMW R1100S - locked and loaded

Lights, Heated Waist Coat, Heated Grips, GPS, and lets not forget short journeys, all take a heavy load.

Many people including myself now consider a battery trickle charger an essential item.

If you are a Summer only biker then it’s a must but even for us Winter riders its necessary to top up the charge at the weekend to keep our bikes running well.

Camera Choices Part 3 – which SLR

camera choices part 1

Back in Part 1 of this series of articles I mentioned that I would be revisiting SLR’s and here I will.

Many people consider the SLR to be King, it’s what people think of when you mention Priofesional Photography. But except for a few areas the SLR is in fact a Jack of all Trades but master of None.

Actually that’s a little unfair, there are two areas in which the SLR is hard to beat.

  • Wildlife & Macro
  • News Photography & Sport

It’s these two areas that continue to drive SLR design.

I am a Nikon user, so when it comes to SLR’s its the current professional Models I will look at.

Top of the tree is the D4. This is focused on performance, and while it does not have the Mega Pixel count of many other cameras, its speed of focus, reaction, and high ISO performance is unparalleled.

This camera can shoot at 11 frames a second in very low light situations. For photographers who have to get the shot, this camera will do its best to get you that shot.

But for some just getting the shot is not enough. What they want is the highest resolution that modern 35mm DSLR can produce. Every subtle of a feather on a bird wants to be resolved to its maximum. So for these Nikon produce two models the D800 and D800E. I have gone on enough about the advantages and disadvantages of the anti-alaising filter, the model D800E lacks this blur -adding filter for the ultimate in resolution but with the risk of Moire.

Lastly in the professional range of Nikon bodies, there is the D300s. This is not a full frame body but is a cropped body, giving a tighter angel of view the a full frame D4. Many treat this as a poor mans sport and wildlife camera. Good reach and fast, but it is getting old now.

  • D4
  • D800(E)
  • D300s

For my work of weddings, studio etc then the D800 seems to be the option, but for my wildlife then a D4 or D300s may be a better option.

So what would be my choice, well just before the D4 was released I would have been tempted by the D3, the D4 while an improvement I don’t like the loss of the second CF card slot, so now I would choose the D800, but it would have to wait. The D800 is 36 Mega Pixels, think new computer and backup drives before reaching for the wallet to buy the camera.

I have missed out a lot of other cameras, what about the D600, slightly lower Mega Pixels then the D800, you could get away with your current computer, but the auto focus system is not up to the standard of the D800 or D4, its been slightly crippled. Unfortunately as you work down a camera manufactures models they become more and more compromised.

I would rather concentrate on getting the shot then fighting the camera, its the top models that allow you to easier to do this.

So yes, when funds allow it will be a D800E unless a secondhand D3s appears at a bargain price.

Whitby in Winter – Day One

Post date Blog Post Day 1 Saturday 1st December

With a couple of days free in both our calendars, we decided a quick trip up North to one of our favourite holiday spots, Whitby.

We decided to go by car as there was a risk of Snow over the North Yorkshire Moors, so that gave me free rein over what camera equipment to take.

The day before we set off I fired up two useful iOS apps, one to predict tide times, as two of the shots I had in mind needed low tide; the other app shows where the sun and moon will be as we’ll as there height.  Things looked promising so I decided to pack the following.

  • Large Format Ebony 5 x 4
  • Small Format Leica M4 & M8
  • Micro Format Nikon Series One V1

We had a gentle start, not rushing, just taking our time heading North.  As the toll had been reduced and because of flooding around York we took the Humber Bridge over the river Humber and then headed over the Yorkshire Wolds to Scarborough.

The purpose of stopping at Scarborough was to visit a fabric shop so that Caroline could buy some silk for a project she has been working on for the last year.  Hopefully in the next few months i’ll be able to post some pictures.  It’s been quite an impressive project with lots of research and even the odd course to learn new skills.

Caroline managed to get the fabric she wanted and we then had a leisurely lunch in Scarborough. It was then time to head further north over the North York Moors.

It was here the weather took a wintery turn with snow and a cold wind. It was a little worrying as the snow started to settle on the roads but as we reached Whitby it started to clear.

We soon found the Bed & Breakfast and settled in. A walk into town followed and a fish supper all washed down with a couple of pint of fine Yorkshire Ale.

No Photography yet but a fine start to the trip.

Coffee, Coffee, Everywhere

Today I had to pop down to London for some business meetings.  It was one mad rush from train station to train station and underground station to underground station.

I remember a time when it was difficult to find a good cup of coffee, now any major city has a Starbucks, Cafe Nero or Costa Coffee.  Even MacDonalds sells real coffee now, though I have yet to try one.

But when it comes to trains it seems we are still limited to instant.  Come on guys, the main train down there had a buffet car, serving wines and beers and a good selection of food but only instant coffee.

At least the train station at real coffee.

Remote Access to iTunes

I have been thinking recently about getting a MacBook Air, the little 11 inch model.

With it having a solid state disk then going much higher then 128 GB soon ups the price, which for a secondary machine for travel is not justifiable.

You can carry an external hard drive, and I might have to for photography backup, but often I might just want to travel light.  So I was wondering how can I access my music, video and photographs at home.

A bit of research, a little bit of port redirection on my router, and I soon had the answer.  Now where ever I am in the world, with internet access, my local iTunes on our laptops can connect to my media server at home and play any of the videos and music on its iTunes library.

Oh yes, Caroline’s old 12 inch Powerbook is now my media server.

Mountain Lion

Well the latest and greatest OS X release is now here.

Not had a chance yet to try it. Will need to ensure all my key apps work with it and if my laptop will take it.

We will be getting it soon either way as its time to replace our old PowerBook.

My MacBookPro still has plenty of life left in, so the new laptop will go to Caroline while I turn the PowerBook into a server.

Update: 27th July

Adobe and Apple have worked closely together to test Adobe® Creative Suite® 5, 5.5 and CS6 editions and individual products for reliability, performance and user experience when installed on Intel® based systems running Mac OS X Mountain Lion (v10.8). Earlier versions of Adobe Photoshop® (CS3 and CS4) software were also tested with Mountain Lion and there are currently no known issues.

Adobe requests that users discovering problems report them to Adobe.

http://www.macrumors.com/2012/07/25/adobe-and-avid-report-only-minor-issues-with-mountain-lion/

The Normal Commute is resumed

Well after a week of motorcycling and generally having fun, today was the day back a work.

After a week in the saddle enjoying the best roads the midlands and North Wales has to offer the morning commute felt very short and remarkably easy despite the rain.

It’s certainly one of the best ways to start a day.