Vivo unveiled the X300 series yesterday, and we were there to cover the entire event.
Apart from the quality time with the X300 Pro and the X300, we were also able to get plenty of photos with both phones. Although we do not have the time, the Vivo X300 photographer was to pull some long distance shots using kit and 2.35x telephoto extendor lens. Today, we finally have it, and you will look at them more, but first, here is a closer look at the real gear.
Undertake
The Vivo X300 Pro photographer kit looks similar to that used with Vivo X200 Ultra. When a separate lens Is Not all accounts are the same, the case. This is a slightly improved design of a case and you combine the extra lens with a strong tolerance around the field, which gives it a little more stability.
The photographer kit is made by PGTech, and it is a seven -part b .x. They have a kit kit for a regular Vivo X300, but we haven’t seen it themselves, and the telephoto extendor option seems to be missing from the X300 camera app.
On the one hand, the Vivo X300 Pro has a removable 62mm filter adapter ring, Bluetooth, 2.35x Vivo Zeiss Telefoto Extender, and a strong, long neck belt to connect to its own battery and phone.
X300 Pro Photographer Kit Unb BOX
The grip slides on the case and connects to the phone via a USB-C port, which can be used to charge the phone through its own port or to charge themselves (it has a 2300mAh battery inside). There is also a wireless connection between the phone and the grip by Bluetooth, which is used for Camera Mera operation.
According to the restrictions, you get a two-phase shutter button, a zoom lever around it, control dial and video record button.
Once you enable the telephoto extendor in the camera settings, you get a few additional options that you can control. Pressing the shutter can take a single shot or explosion range, for example. You can have a lock lock on the Half-Party Action Focus and Exposure of the Shutter, or it can continuously run in AF-C Focus mode.
The zoom level surrounding the shutter simply moves easily between the full central range rather than jumping between the OPT pattical length of the Vivo X300 Pro.
Grip
To screw on extra lenses, you first need to attach a special adapter ring. You can keep the adapter there all the time as it does not interfere with any camera’s regular operation.
Once you have a telephoto extendor bad, you have to activate it with a camera viewfinder shortcut, which is different from the X200 Ultra, where you had to enter a separate camera mode. Nevertheless, the principle of operation peration is often the same – activate the use of an extendor when you need it and disable it when it is not on the camera.
The 2.35x teleconverter takes the 85mm camera of the Vivo X300 Pro at 200 mm OPT ptickly. You also get 400mm, 800mm and 1,600mm toggles in the viewfinder, but they are digital. All those samples you see below have been taken on all original 200 mm.

Camera samples
Teleconverter photos (200mm)
Teleconverter Photos (200mm) Low-Light
And here’s a video that we have shot with an extendor attached, full handheld.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nc2cw6qpfyo
Price
Individually, the lens is CNY 999 (€ 120, INR 12,400), the case and grip CNY 699 (€ 85, INR 8,700), but you can also sell them with CNY for CNY 800 Pro for CNY 1,499 (€ 182, INR 18,700). (€ 1000, INR 103,600). We have no pricing information outside China, as the phones have not yet been started outside their home market, though there are some indications that this will happen soon.

It is worth noting that for the X300 Pro, PGTech has also come with an alternative, lighter color type, as well as with standard black and gray. For this, you may also have lenses in matching silver colors.
