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Just Take A Photograph In A Bright Sky Having A Aircraft In It, Both With And Without Having The Lens Hood

I'm making use of Nikon lenses ranging from 52mm filter threads to 77mm. Will screw in varieties of filters for 77mm function with my other more compact lenses with adaptor rings & using a lens hood linked or do I have to buy a filter for every single specific lens size. How about 4X4 filters from someone like Lee & just hold the filter against the front of the lens hood. How does one guys bypass this problem. Buying filters for each and every lense will get pretty expensive fast.

Most of us use filters only pretty rarely. Why do you need filters? Someone may perhaps have a suggestion if you can provide much more info. Don't count this as truth but I think I just read on a photo forum that Lee was out of business but that does not mean they're not available. With Lee or Cokin most by the holder and then the threaded adapters to fit the lenses they have.

Lens hoods are fairly targeted towards lens to which they shall be mounted (length, diameter, flair, and corner cuts for WA lenses). Use the lens mfr's hood for that lens or and exact third party copy.

A lens hood is the top way to protect the lens, so it’s good to use if possible. Utilizing a step ring to install 77mm filters on a 52mm lens will work just fine if flare isn’t a problem. But when flare is a problem, you're stuck if you can't use the lens hood with your filter.

The Lee filter holder is good for when you need multiple filters. For example, for a landscape shot you may well need a polarizer to deepen the sky and create much more contrast with the clouds, a didymium filter to enhance certain natural colors, a graduated neutral density filter to balance the luminance of two areas of the scene, and lastly a neutral density filter to reduce light and extend exposure time (to capture moving water, for example.) The holder allows you to perfectly position the GND filter and to rotate the polarizer. They function perfect with tripod photography, as they’re a little bulky to have attached all the time.

Filters are important tools. Look at them as Photoshop for the lens. They help control light...which is your goal as a photographer.

does it matter in which slot I put slower memory on this motherboard?

does it matter in which slot I put slower memory on this motherboard?

. Details of the motherboard are:
Mfr Part Number: K8M890M-M
CPU: Socket 775 support Core 2 Extreme/ Core 2 Duo/ Pentium D/ Pentium 4/ Celeron D Processors, Support Hyper Threading Technology; FSB 1066/800/533 MHz
Chipset: Intel P965 & ICH8DH (ViiV)
Memory: 4x 240pin DDR2-800/667/533 DIMMs, Dual Channel, Max capacity 8GB
Slots: 2x PCI Express x16 slots (One run on x4); 2x PCI Express x1 slots; 3x PCI slots
IDE/SATA: 6x SATA2 ports (ICH8DH) support RAID 0, 1, 0+1, 5; 1x ATA-133 channels (JMB363); 1x Internal + 1x External SATA ports (JMB363), support RAID 0, 1 and JBOD
Audio: Realtek ALC885 8-Channel High Definition Audio CODEC
LAN: Intel 82566DC + Realtek RTL8110S Gigabit LAN controllers
Ports: 1x External SATA port; 10x USB 2.0 ports (4 re

It won't matter which slot you put it in but be aware that it will cause your PC to run at the speed of the slowest memory card which in your case will be 533MHz. If you want to run at 800MHz all your memory has to be the same. If you had 2GB x 800MHz and added 256MB 533MHz then the whole system will run at 533MHz

JohnLloydCruz&BeaAlonzo-MFR-Part 2

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