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In all seriousness, I'm assuming that's a non-native lens. I had a lot of weird interaction with, e.g., Canon lenses - stabilized or not - with the Fuji IBIS. It wouldn't surprise me at all to see the sensor drifting during the exposure. I had better results with the Fuji 250 + 1.4x than with the Canon 400/5.6 for just that reason.Weird - I thought this kind of distortion only occurred with movement by either user or subject (or both).
Did we already talk about this? I can't remember.. what other lenses did you try on the telephoto end with the GFX 100 sensor?In all seriousness, I'm assuming that's a non-native lens. I had a lot of weird interaction with, e.g., Canon lenses - stabilized or not - with the Fuji IBIS. It wouldn't surprise me at all to see the sensor drifting during the exposure. I had better results with the Fuji 250 + 1.4x than with the Canon 400/5.6 for just that reason.
Yes, of course. I was responding to nameBrandon. Apologies for my lack of clarity.In my photograph we are talking of a focal length of 600mm - there is no Fuji lens that could do that.
However, he used the ES.It's an ES anomaly not in particular related to Fuji or your camera for that matter, but rather a feature if you like of the slow sensor read-out time.
Simple remedy: use a tripod or use EF next time.
Of course, the tripod is the solution. But I found it interesting to try the IBIS, which also worked well. I used the ES because I had blur when taking photos from the tripod, which disappeared when I switched to the ES.I would sure try the same shots with a tripod.