Teleconverters or Extenders
Not to be confused with Extension Tubes (which I talked about in the last article), teleconverters are small lightweight optics that fit between the camera and the lens, which multiplies the focal length and aberrations of your lens. This gives you an inexpensive way of getting more zoom out of your zoom lenses. They allow you to get in closer and capture more detail on your subject, but at the same time there is a downside to using them. The addition of more glass between the camera and the lens causes the sharpness and contrast quality of a “tack sharp” image to suffer and the larger the extender, the worse the quality will be. The good news--if you have a professional grade lens, with a quality extender, the optical degradation will be negligible, especially with the 1.4x teleconverter as compared to the 2x teleconverter.
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American Bald Eagle--Elk Breakfast is Served
1/125 sec. at f/8.0, 540mm (EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6 L IS + 1.4x)
I had taken several shots of this eagle without a teleconverter, but wanted to get a closer shot. I didn't take all my shots with the teleconverter because I had to manually focus when I had the Extender on this particular lens. Some lenses will still allow you to use Auto Focus while using Extenders. Be sure to check the lens specifications before you buy, if you don't want to manually focus.







