I find, for example, that when tracking Grace as she charges around the 
room, I can easily keep the shutter release in the halfway position, so 
I don't miss a beat. I would guess that's what the sports photogs do 
when shooting with their long Canon IS glass.
Paul
On Dec 2, 2006, at 9:49 AM, Shel Belinkoff wrote:

> If that's the case, then SR is mostly useless for quick shooting ... 
> <sigh>
>
> Shel
>
>
>
>> [Original Message]
>> From: David Bliss
>
>> One thing that I didn't figure out until I'd read the manual ten or 
>> twelve
>> times is that SR does not work unless you hold the shutter release 
>> half-
>> pressed for a few seconds, until the SR (hand) icon shows in the lower
> left
>> of the viewfinder.  If you just fire the shutter all the way, no SR.
>> Might explain the behavior you're seeing.
>>
>> At least, this is my understanding from the bottom grey box on p. 68 
>> of
>> the manual and from my K10D's behavior.
>>
>> I find SR works **GREAT**.  I regularly get shots at 210mm at 1/15 
>> that
>> show no signs of motion blur.
>
>
>
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