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I have a Rebel XT and there are times I need to transport it (carry it to location) with the 100-400mm attached. It is not always convient or clean enough to attach the lens once on location. I am looking for a camera case that will accomodate this configuration. Something I can lay the camera and lens in, with hood attached, for easy access.

2007-02-28 15:05:12 · 5 answers · asked by Hawaiian Nut 3 in Consumer Electronics Cameras

5 answers

Check out LowePro. I am certain they would have a case that would fill your needs. (And they are the best...)

2007-02-28 15:09:19 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Check the ads in all the photo magazines. Or even try some on line. A bit of advice though. When you do find one, get it bigger than what you presently need, cuz down the road you will need a lot more room. I bought one about twice the size I needed when I bought my first one, and it lasted just about a year before I had to get a bigger one. Another thing to consider is to get one that's not the normal black, get a red one, or any other color. The reason is if anybody tries to walk off with your bag, it wil stand out a lot more, and will be easier to spot from a distance. If you can only get one color, then put something on it to make it stand out more. You can tie some bright colored yarn on the handles, but don't just put them on one part, put them in several areas, so they can't be removed quickly. Also, put your name and other info in different areas of the bag. If you see somebody carrying it, you could always ID it with those name tags. Don't buy a cheap one. You need a quality bag for a quality camera.

2007-02-28 15:20:49 · answer #2 · answered by johN p. aka-Hey you. 7 · 0 0

I would recommond a Tamroc case, either the 600 series or the 700 series bag. Their big enough to hold one telephoto lens going across but you will be unable to put other lens in it in most of the 600 and 700 series. I have a Tamroc 700 series bag its big enough to keep my 70-200mm f/2.8 lens upright and my Rebel XTi with a 24-105mm f/4 on my camera going across. Theres also enough room for a Speedlite 480EX on the side. Go to a local store and try them out.

2007-02-28 16:28:46 · answer #3 · answered by Koko 4 · 0 0

i do not comprehend at the same time as the "Ace" became in Africa, yet in maximum parks, you could't go out the vehicle except below very constrained circumstances and definitely no longer at the same time as there are animals interior sight. area in vehicles is constrained, so bringing each lens will be a difficulty. typically, for most animals like birds, you want a zoom which could attain out to 400mm. image stabilization will absolutely be a ought to. maximum vehicles have sand luggage and individuals shoot by the open roof. A monopod gained't artwork besides as resting on a sand bag, and a tripod honestly gained't artwork from a vehicle until eventually there is in effortless words you, the driver, and another individual. A sandbag with an IS lens will make for shake-loose photos, fairly interior the early morning ordinary at the same time as animals are lively. A 70-200mm don't have sufficient attain, until eventually you take advantage of a 2x teleconverter. from time to time, you get fortunate and the animals walk proper by your vehicle. it really is completely a lot less complicated to have a second digicam body with a great lens for those circumstances; you gained't have time to change lenses from the large zoom to the wide lens. I concur with fhotoace's suggestion of a great 10-20mm lens. What i'd advise is this: a million body with your optical stabilized superzoom, a second body with a 10-20mm connected. The mid-variety zooms (i.e. 24 to 135mm), so reliable for pictures and wide-spread capturing, is fantastically unlikely for use on safari--no longer wide sufficient for vistas, no longer sufficient magnification for distances. convey a plastic bag to placed over the front of your one hundred-400mm, because it really is faster to tug a bag off than get a lenscap off, and the bag may also help to avert airborne dirt and mud from transferring into the digicam and lens, extraordinarily because the vehicle strikes. A backpack on your equipment is reliable. in simple terms make sure that you do have your digicam(s) accessible round your neck once you want them. convey more suitable batteries. cost them earlier you depart residing house too. Oh and convey a great number of memory playing cards.

2016-12-05 02:16:10 · answer #4 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

May I suggest a pelican case? These are heavy duty cases that are easily customized yourself. Check out the link.

2007-02-28 15:08:45 · answer #5 · answered by metagg 3 · 1 0

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