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The need for speed system. His X Series journey began in 2013 with the X-Pro1, which he used as a ‘pit-lane walkabout’ with a series of prime lenses. Like many Fast-moving action presents a stern test for any camera, but motorsport photographer Jeff Carter knows that X-H2S is up to the challenge

SPECS ›  Sensor 26.1-megapixel APS-C CMOS stacked ›  ISO Auto, 160-12,800 (expandable to 80-51,200 for stills, 160-25,600 video) › Image stabilisation In-body sensor shift with 7-stop improvement ›  Screen 3in vari-angle tilting touchscreen, 1.62m dots ›  Shutter speed 15 mins to 1/32,000sec electronic ›  Autofocus Intelligent hybrid AF, phase and contrast detect with 425 points. Sensitivity to -7EV (with XF50mmF1.0 attached)

early converts, the colours and functionality appealed; so much so, that when the X-T1 arrived a year later, he sold his entire Nikon kit and switched over. As lenses were added and the system grew, so did his confidence in the series. Models like X-T4, and now X-H2S, have cemented his belief that he made the right decision. “When I got the X-T1, I was the only person trackside with a mirrorless camera – now everyone’s got them,” he smiles. “I used to get mocked for having a camera with a flip-out screen, but when you’re working in the pit lane, you can’t lay down. I could get a different perspective.” Crucially, this latest incarnation of X Series has stayed true to its roots. The X-Trans CMOS 5 HS sensor still delivers the colours Jeff wants, while the analogue functionality remains intact – but performance has been boosted. “The camera takes a CFexpress card and that’s a step up – I save Raws to the CFexpress and JPEGs to an SD card. With the X-T4, you get 35 Raws before it starts slowing down. X-H2S doesn’t slow down. I get a continuous burst with cars off the start line, no problem.” While the headline figures for X-H2S are sure to grab attention, it’s

JEFF CARTER macleanphotographic.com

JEFF CARTER’S LIFE moves as fast as the action he photographs. When we talk, the globetrotting motorsport snapper had just returned from a European Le Mans series race in Spain and was due back on a plane less than 24 hours later, heading to the latest leg of the FIA European Historic Rally Championship. Unsurprisingly, he needs his cameras to keep up with him. He’s been using Fujifilm X Series kit for almost a decade, and the recently introduced X-H2S has got his pulse racing. “It’s mind- blowing how good it is,” he tells us. “The autofocus will track a car coming towards you and shoot at 40fps. If I shoot a three-second burst – 120 frames – every frame, bar one or two, will be sharp.” For Jeff, it’s a real coming-of-age moment for Fujifilm’s mirrorless

bought a cage and monitor and is sold on the AF performance with video. However, it’s the 6K resolution that holds real appeal. “Everything I shoot is output at 1080p, so if I record at 6K, I can crop in, moving within the frame. I can make it look like I’m panning the car within the frame!” With an X-H2S already part of his kit, Jeff will add another body in due course, using his ‘standard’ XF200mm f/2 lens on one, and an XF16-55mm on the other. “You can spend all day on image, and another two getting it right in Photoshop, but I can’t do that. I need to have 100 images on a website within ten minutes of a session – X-H2S makes that possible.”

some of the more subtle tweaks that also stand out for Jeff. Returning to the autofocus performance, he acknowledges how custom AF modes have been vastly improved. “I use the custom AF settings to track accelerating/decelerating subjects or to ignore obstacles passing in front of the camera,” he tells us. “Those functions have improved with each generation. It’s good enough to use professionally. ISO performance is good, too,” he continues. “I will happily shoot with X-T4 at 6400, but with X-H2S I’ll go to 12,800 and won’t worry about it.” Like many photographers, video is becoming an essential part of Jeff’s working life, and the X-H2S has much to offer. He’s already

›  Frame rates Up to 40fps (electronic shutter), 15fps (mechanical shutter)

›  Recording media 1x CFexpress Type B, 1x SD/SDHC/SDXC slot ›  Input/output Mic input jack, headphone jack. USB-C, 2.5mm sub-mini control input, 2.4/5GHz Wi-Fi, Bluetooth ›  Dimensions (wxhxd) 136.3x92.9x84.6mm ›  Weight 660g with battery and memory card

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