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Home → Photography Techniques

Photographing Aircraft in Flight with the Tamron 150-600mm Lens

By Thomas Stirr 78 Comments
Last Updated On February 16, 2019

On Labour Day weekend, I had the opportunity to go to the International Air Show at the Canadian National Exhibition in Toronto and photograph various aircraft in flight. I arranged for use of a new Tamron 150-600mm VC lens (see our detailed review) and used it with my Nikon D800. This article provides some thoughts on how that combination performed, as well as sharing some of the techniques I used to capture the images in this article.

Photographing aircraft with Tamron 150-600mm (1)
NIKON D800 + 150.0-600.0 mm f/5.0-6.3 @ ISO 400, 1/2500, f/8.0

Lighting conditions were mixed during the afternoon when I was at the air show. I had some bright sunshine on the eastern view, but the western view had an expansive backdrop of dull, grey clouds all afternoon.

Photographing aircraft with Tamron 150-600mm (2)
NIKON D800 @ ISO 400, 10/25000, f/8.0

Unfortunately, the majority of aircraft did most of their formation flying to the west of my position, putting them up against a dull, grey backdrop. That made getting shots that were actually in good lighting “must have” captures.

Photographing aircraft with Tamron 150-600mm (3)
NIKON D800 @ ISO 800, 10/32000, f/8.0

And, as is often the case at such events, the ‘smoke trails’ from subsequent demonstrations created a thickening haze as the afternoon progressed. This necessitated a lot of post processing work on the images.

Photographing aircraft with Tamron 150-600mm (4)
NIKON D800 @ ISO 400, 10/12500, f/8.0

To try and get the sharpest images I could from the Nikon D800/Tamron 150-600mm combination I shot in aperture priority mode at f/8, at either ISO-400 or ISO-800 depending on how lighting conditions changed during the afternoon.

Photographing aircraft with Tamron 150-600mm (5)
NIKON D800 @ ISO 400, 10/16000, f/8.0

I used AF-C with either single point or 9-point auto focus for all images.

Photographing aircraft with Tamron 150-600mm (6)
NIKON D800 @ ISO 400, 10/20000, f/8.0

I shot in DX crop mode for many of the single airplane captures and often switched to FX for the larger group formation shots.

Photographing aircraft with Tamron 150-600mm (7)
NIKON D800 @ ISO 800, 10/25000, f/8.0

All images were shot hand-held as very fast panning was required.

Photographing aircraft with Tamron 150-600mm (8)
NIKON D800 @ ISO 400, 10/16000, f/8.0

As noted in my Tamron 150-600mm VC review, the zoom ring takes multiple wrist twists to adjust it from the closest to longest focal length position. Trying to use it with fast flying aircraft, especially when flying in formation, is simply not practical.

Photographing aircraft with Tamron 150-600mm (9)
NIKON D800 @ ISO 800, 10/32000, f/8.0

I attached the tripod collar to the lens, rotated it 90-degrees towards the right, then hooked the bottom two fingers of my shutter hand over the tightening screw on the collar to brace the lens as I held the front hood and used a ‘push/pull’ movement to adjust focal length. This worked extremely well and allowed me to frame shots very quickly. As a result many shots needed only minimal cropping after-the-fact.

Photographing aircraft with Tamron 150-600mm (10)
NIKON D800 + 150.0-600.0 mm f/5.0-6.3 @ ISO 400, 1/1600, f/8.0

To capture aircraft with their smoke trails and get them positioned where you want them in the frame, it is important to anticipate your shots and adjust the position of your focus point. If you don’t you’ll end up using only ½ of your frame and missing some of the potential drama of long smoke trails in your images. Repositioning your focus point also helps the composition of your images, especially if you are trying to use the ‘rule of thirds’.

Photographing aircraft with Tamron 150-600mm (11)
NIKON D800 @ ISO 400, 10/20000, f/8.0

Overall, I had a great time shooting with the Tamron 150-600mm VC and my Nikon D800. I found the combination performed very well and it nailed focus pretty much flawlessly. For those of you who may be contemplating a long focal length zoom and are unsure of which lens to choose, I can attest to the fact that the added reach of the Tamron 150-600mm VC is a real bonus when trying to capture these types of images.

Photographing aircraft with Tamron 150-600mm (12)
NIKON D800 @ ISO 400, 10/25000, f/8.0

While I did do a lot of processing to the RAW files for this article, I didn’t apply any additional sharpening in CS6 to any of the images to give Photography Life readers an idea how the Tamron 150-600mm VC performs at f/8 at various focal lengths.

Photographing aircraft with Tamron 150-600mm (13)
NIKON D800 + 150.0-600.0 mm f/5.0-6.3 @ ISO 400, 1/2000, f/8.0

The combination of the Nikon D800/Tamron 150-600mm weighs about 6.3 lbs. (2.86 kg) and I must admit that my wrist was a bit sore at the end of the afternoon after taking over 1,400 individual images in 3 hours.

Photographing aircraft with Tamron 150-600mm (14)
NIKON D800 @ ISO 400, 10/25000, f/8.0

Article and all images are Copyright Thomas Stirr. All rights reserved, no use, reproduction or duplication including electronic is allowed without written consent.

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Filed Under: Photography Techniques Tagged With: Nikon D800, Photography Tips, Super Telephoto Lens, Tamron

About Thomas Stirr

Thomas Stirr is an author, photographer/videographer, and executive coach based in Grimsby Ontario Canada. He specializes in industrial photography, as well as safety/training/corporate videos. His work also includes landscape and nature photography, and experimentation with photo art. Nikon Canada has featured Tom's work numerous times on Facebook and Twitter. To follow Thomas, please visit his photography blog and check out his eBooks.

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Alan
Alan
July 5, 2024 11:03 am

Thanks for the article. Were you using Tamron G2 150-600 zoom lens or the previous model? I use the G2 with Nikon Z7 camera for air shows and beach sport activities.

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ardo
ardo
August 26, 2015 6:03 am

Sorry to read that , you are the first person that I know that reported on this site having a problem with the lens. The first day I bought that lens (Nikon D7100) the first shot I took I had the mirror that went up while pressing the shutter button with no picture taken having to press again , to return it down resulting in a blank image(black). The problem was coming from the SD (Xtreme Plus 80 mb/s Sandisk) after discovering I had the same problem with my 70-200 F2.8 in all my NIkon cameras. After Installing two Lexar SDXC1 64 gb the problem never reoccurred while shooting in any mode (S,CL, CH). After buying a Nikon D750 I tried them again with the older SD cards and I had the same problem again. I think Sigma and Tamron can offer much cheaper lenses than Nikon Sony or Canon not because of inferior design and manufacturing quality but because of the volume of sales each model generate, by just changing the lens mount and offering the same lens to the three major camera owners. I feel you were unlucky.
Let’s hope you get it fix quickly and happy shooting

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Tassilo Erath
Tassilo Erath
Reply to  ardo
August 26, 2015 8:30 pm

Actually yes I was without the lens for about 4 weeks as it had to be send back for repairs and I can say so far no problems it’s working good. I also have the Tamron 70 – 300 which I really like and the price was great so over all on those 2 lens Tamron has a thumbs up from me

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Tassilo Erath
Tassilo Erath
August 26, 2015 4:21 am

Very nice pictures I was very impressed with them. I bought this lens for my Canon as soon as it came out, I do like the lens, the weight is something to get used to, the only thing I found and you have to remember it is a 3rd party lens and a lot cheaper then say Nikon or Canon but to make a long story short I didn’t use it much before the focus motor went, I have the full warranty from Henry’s so it was not problem getting them to look after sending it in for repairs but I was disappointed with it giving out that soon about 3 months and I used it only about 5 times. I don’t use it that often but maybe after seeing your pictures I might bring it out more.

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Thomas Stirr
Thomas Stirr
Author
Reply to  Tassilo Erath
August 26, 2015 7:18 pm

Hello Tassilo,
Sorry to hear about your durability/quality issue with the Tamron. Hopefully your warranty repair will be handled quickly so you can get back to shooting!
Tom

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Sern
Sern
December 13, 2014 12:10 am

From what I understand using a TC on a variable aperture lens is not a good idea. You have to remember that whatever the X factor is of the TC it’s going to increase the f-stop by that much also. Both Cannon and Nikon recommend using TC’s on nothing greater than f/4 and in most cases f/2.8 only.

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Thomas Stirr
Thomas Stirr
Reply to  Sern
December 13, 2014 5:27 am

Hi Sam,
You are absolutely correct! Tamron also does not recommend using a teleconverter with this lens.
Tom

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Aztec
Aztec
October 17, 2014 4:39 am

Oh ok ! I see …. thanks !
So if i ever wanted to “zoom” even closer, i would have to wait for Tamron to release a teleconverter for the 150-600mm, right ?

Do you think it would be useful, on a lens like this ?

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Thomas Stirr
Thomas Stirr
Reply to  Aztec
October 17, 2014 6:02 am

Hi Aztec,

It could be but it would depend how much quality is lost because of the teleconverter.

Tom

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Aztec
Aztec
October 16, 2014 4:57 am

Hi there … could you explain (efov), and how that works … PLZ.

Let’s say i would consider using a D810 in DX crop mode, with the Tamron …
At max focal length (600mm) … does that mean that i would literally “zoom” closer ??
Or does it just mean that the framed final image is bigger ?

Thanks for the help, and for the articles !

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Thomas Stirr
Thomas Stirr
Reply to  Aztec
October 16, 2014 6:53 pm

Hi Aztec,

When you shoot with a D810 in DX crop mode you are only using a portion of the camera’s sensor i.e. 15MP rather than the full 36MP. You are still shooting with a 600mm lens so there is no ‘zoom closer’. By using the DX crop mode the camera is cropping the image for you which creates the illusion of zooming in closer. You would have the same size subject if you shot in FX mode and cropped it yourself in post down to 15MP.

I often use the DX crop mode to reduce cropping in post, reduce file size, and also get marginally more frames per second than if I shot in FX mode.

Tom

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Terry
Terry
October 5, 2014 1:49 am

Hi Thomas,
Great article and photos. I brought 1 recently but have not yet used it on my canon 60D yet as I’ve gone back to sea but am looking forward to it,
I’m going to fire on a 1.4 tele converter just to see what over kill looks like.
Keep up your great articles
Terry

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Thomas Stirr
Thomas Stirr
Reply to  Terry
October 5, 2014 5:25 am

Hi Terry,

Thanks for your comment and kind words…very glad you have been enjoying the articles! Let us know what you think after using the teleconverter. Currently using teleconverters with the 150-600 is not recommended by Tamron…but I do understand from my contacts there that Tamron is considering the development of their own 1.4x teleconverter to match up with this lens.

Tom

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Brian Gaschler
Brian Gaschler
September 4, 2014 8:02 pm

Great shots and advice throughout! Thanks for posting this, Thomas.

-Brian

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Thomas Stirr
Thomas Stirr
Reply to  Brian Gaschler
September 4, 2014 8:23 pm

Hi Brian,

Glad you enjoyed the article!

Tom

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John
John
September 4, 2014 3:09 pm

Hi Thomas,

I have the Tamron 150-600 myself, but have never gone to any air shows. After reading this post, I will be keeping my eye out for the next large airshow to test out some of your tips. I really like the slightly aged look to some of your photographs (almost looks slightly like a painting). Was there any particular filter you are applying to get that look?

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Thomas Stirr
Thomas Stirr
Reply to  John
September 4, 2014 3:20 pm

Hi John,

No particular filter was used…..just one heck of a lot of work in post processing to try and get something useable out of the shots. The slight ‘aged’ look is likely due to the very heavy haze that was in the air from the successive rounds of smoke trails from the various aircraft.

Tom

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Sha
Sha
Reply to  Thomas Stirr
September 4, 2014 5:15 pm

Hi Tom,

Loved your shots. It would be great if you could do a mini followup to describe/ show the post processing that you had to go through on some of these photos. It would be interesting to see how much the photos differ from the RAW image to the final product.

IMO the way you have cropped the photos are amazing.

ps I have a sudden urge to watch top gun now.

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Thomas Stirr
Thomas Stirr
Reply to  Sha
September 4, 2014 6:04 pm

Hi Sha,

Thanks for the positive comments about the article…much appreciated!

Re: a follow-up article…sounds like it could be a good idea…I wonder how many other readers would find this of interest….?

Tom

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Thomas Stirr
Thomas Stirr
Reply to  Sha
September 5, 2014 9:24 pm

Hi Sha,

Thanks for your suggestion…I wrote an article on this subject and its now posted on Photography Life.

Tom

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Tapo
Tapo
September 4, 2014 11:42 am

The quality of images (not photographic quality but pixel quality) has gone down considerably ever since you switched to this newer version of the website. The images appear to be very pix-elated and compressed.

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Thomas Stirr
Thomas Stirr
Reply to  Tapo
September 4, 2014 1:36 pm

Hi Tapo,

It may not be the change in the website format…but rather my post processing…. :-)

Tom

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Reply

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