A friend lent me his 105VR Micro lens for a couple of weeks as he is off shooting W/A...
I tried it in my Fantasea Line FD80 housing when I had the prototype and had no problem sliding it in. Alas they've added a bracketing control and it rubs on the lens now. No worries, just slide the camera in without the lens and then mount the lens and screw on the standard port and ext ring to fit. No extra port to buy! There almost room for a manual focus cam, but I may have to get creative.
I also decided to try just an SB-800 strobe in my Fantasea FSB-800 housing for it. When I previously tried to shoot both it in I-TTL and an Inon z240 in man., the SB800 underexposed badly. My friend Jean B. from Aquatica told me at the Long Beach show he discovered the same problem; the SB-800 wants either to be by itself or with a second SB-800 in TTL to properly expose. And Jean was correct! Happily enjoyed nearly flawless I-TTL shots yesterday. I did try a bit of warming gel and diffuser filters inside the case with good result, in fact a bit more is warranted.
Anyway went off to dive So. Whidbey island yesterday and had a couple of decent dives on the ferry wreck and another nearby site.
The lens is very fast to focus and I agree with other reviewers, almost too fast to get the wrong focus and release while in AF-S mode. I think AF-A mode may be better. It seemed like I couldn't get close enough without a Woody's on. With the Woody's it was great. I might add a 2x internal diopter as it would be a little sharper I think.
Some results:
Northern Ronquil
Painted Greenling
Rockfish
To sum up, I like it a lot and will save my pennies up for one, but I do think the 60mm seems to focus closer and is easier to control, although harder to light and not as useful farther away.
And a tip of the TTL hat to Jean!
Jack

I tried it in my Fantasea Line FD80 housing when I had the prototype and had no problem sliding it in. Alas they've added a bracketing control and it rubs on the lens now. No worries, just slide the camera in without the lens and then mount the lens and screw on the standard port and ext ring to fit. No extra port to buy! There almost room for a manual focus cam, but I may have to get creative.
I also decided to try just an SB-800 strobe in my Fantasea FSB-800 housing for it. When I previously tried to shoot both it in I-TTL and an Inon z240 in man., the SB800 underexposed badly. My friend Jean B. from Aquatica told me at the Long Beach show he discovered the same problem; the SB-800 wants either to be by itself or with a second SB-800 in TTL to properly expose. And Jean was correct! Happily enjoyed nearly flawless I-TTL shots yesterday. I did try a bit of warming gel and diffuser filters inside the case with good result, in fact a bit more is warranted.
Anyway went off to dive So. Whidbey island yesterday and had a couple of decent dives on the ferry wreck and another nearby site.
The lens is very fast to focus and I agree with other reviewers, almost too fast to get the wrong focus and release while in AF-S mode. I think AF-A mode may be better. It seemed like I couldn't get close enough without a Woody's on. With the Woody's it was great. I might add a 2x internal diopter as it would be a little sharper I think.
Some results:
Northern Ronquil

Painted Greenling

Rockfish

To sum up, I like it a lot and will save my pennies up for one, but I do think the 60mm seems to focus closer and is easier to control, although harder to light and not as useful farther away.
And a tip of the TTL hat to Jean!
Jack