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    Vivo X300 Zeiss Teleconverter: How the 800mm Zoom Works

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    If you’ve ever tried to shoot wildlife or a faraway stage on your phone, you know the limits. Details smear. Hands shake. Vivo says the X300 and X300 Pro will change that by supporting a Zeiss 2.35x teleconverter, the same add-on first seen with the X200 Ultra. The pitch is simple: more reach, steadier shots, fewer compromises.

    Short Answer: Vivo confirms both X300 and X300 Pro will work with a Zeiss 2.35x teleconverter. The accessory boosts optical reach and, combined with the 200MP telephoto, enables effective 200/400/800mm framing. The Pro is claimed to hit CIPA 5.5 stabilisation; the standard model 4.5. Launch in China Oct 13.

    What Vivo is adding to the X300 lineup

    Vivo has announced support for the Zeiss 2.35x teleconverter on both the X300 and X300 Pro, not just the top variant. That matters because accessories often get locked to “Ultra” models. This time, the reach upgrade appears across the range. Vivo and several outlets point to portraits, landscapes, and everyday snaps as supported modes, with a new silver finish for the lens.

    Launch timing
    Mark your calendar: China launch is scheduled for October 13 at 7 pm local time. Expect pricing and availability then, plus details on bundles. Pre-reservations have already been spotted in China.

    800mm, explained in plain English

    Think of the teleconverter as a magnifying eyepiece for your phone’s telephoto. On the X200 Ultra, attaching the 2.35x unit turned the native 85mm periscope into a 200mm equivalent. The X300 series sticks with a 200MP telephoto platform, so the logic is similar: you start at a longer native focal length, then use the dense sensor to crop cleanly to tighter fields of view like ~400mm or ~800mm. It is not “pure” optical at 800mm, but the image pipeline leans on a strong optical base and a high-resolution sensor, which tends to look better than straight digital zoom.

    Short Answer: 800mm on a phone is an effective framing. The 2.35x teleconverter increases optical reach, then the 200MP sensor crops to tighter views. The first step is optical. The rest is smart cropping with less quality loss than standard digital zoom.

    Stabilisation: why CIPA 5.5/4.5 matters

    At long focal lengths, tiny shakes blur photos. Vivo claims the X300 Pro hits a CIPA 5.5 stabilisation rating, with the standard X300 at 4.5. Higher numbers indicate stronger shake correction, which should help handheld shots even with the add-on lens. Real-world results will depend on technique, light, and subject movement, but these ratings are among the highest we’ve seen touted for a phone.

    Handheld tips at long reach

    • Brace your elbows against your body and breathe out gently as you tap the shutter.
    • Use 2-second self-timer to avoid tap shake.
    • Prefer faster shutter speeds in Pro mode when light allows.
    • If you can, add a grip or a small tripod ring for stability during concerts or sports.

    Shooting modes that benefit most

    Portraits from a distance get natural compression and creamy background separation. Landscapes from a high viewpoint can frame a distant peak without pixel mush. Casual city snaps, like isolating a clock face or a billboard, also work well. If light is very low, consider removing the teleconverter and letting the phone’s night pipeline handle it.

    Quick setup guide: attaching and using the teleconverter

    1. Mount the provided adapter ring on the phone case.
    2. Align the teleconverter and twist to lock.
    3. Open the camera and switch to the telephoto module.
    4. Half-tap to focus, shoot a burst, then review at 100% zoom for sharpness.
    5. For long sessions, consider a grip or strap to reduce fatigue.
      Background from the X200 Ultra kit suggests the adapter uses a 67 mm filter interface and optional tripod ring, both handy for stability. We’ll confirm exact X300 kit contents at launch.

    Short Answer: Attach the adapter ring, twist-lock the Zeiss 2.35x lens, switch to telephoto, and shoot. Use a self-timer or grip to cut shake. Remove the converter in dim light if the phone struggles for shutter speed.

    Pros and cons vs periscope-only phones

    Pros

    • Sharper long-range detail thanks to added optical reach
    • More natural subject isolation for portraits and wildlife
    • Works across multiple modes

    Cons

    • Extra bulk to carry and mount
    • Added glass may lower light transmission; low-light performance can dip
    • Handling is slower than a built-in periscope only

    For context, the X200 Ultra’s teleconverter already showed how a well-designed extender can lift telephoto quality, though low light still challenged it. Expect similar trade-offs here until we test the final hardware.

    X300 vs X300 Pro: what’s different for long-range shots

    On paper, both support the Zeiss teleconverter. The Pro’s claimed CIPA 5.5 may give it a steadier handheld edge. Reports also point to a custom 200MP telephoto pipeline and improved coatings, which should reduce flare and color fringing at long reach. We’ll verify once we shoot side by side.

    Mini case studies

    • Cricket match: from the stands, 200mm native helps isolate the batter. Cropped to ~400mm, you can frame the wicket keeper cleanly.
    • Birding in parks: handheld at ~200–400mm is realistic; for ~800mm, brace or use a mini tripod ring.
    • Concerts: the kit’s grip and strap make long takes more comfortable; watch shutter speeds under bright stage lights.

    Should you buy the teleconverter kit?

    If you often shoot faraway subjects and care about detail, yes, it’s worth short-listing. If most of your photos are indoors or at night, you may leave it at home. Vivo and partners sold the X200 Ultra kit with grip, adapter rings, and a tripod collar. We expect a similar bundle or standalone lens options for X300. Pricing will be clearer on launch day.

    Comparison X300 vs X300 Pro quick view

    FeatureX300X300 Pro
    Teleconverter supportYesYes
    Claimed CIPA rating (telephoto)4.55.5
    Telephoto sensor pipeline200MP class, vendor-stated200MP custom pipeline with coatings and tracking improvements (reported)

    FAQ

    Is the Zeiss teleconverter included or sold separately?
    The X200 Ultra bundled it with a “Photography Kit” on select versions and sold it separately elsewhere. We’ll confirm X300 packaging at launch.

    Will it work without a tripod?
    Yes, but stability improves with a grip or mini tripod ring, especially beyond ~400mm. The Pro’s claimed CIPA 5.5 should help handheld shots.

    Does the teleconverter affect low-light photos?
    Any extra glass may reduce light. In dim scenes, consider removing the converter and relying on the phone’s night pipeline.

    What about video at long reach?
    Expect jitter to be more noticeable. Stabilise your wrists, use a grip, and avoid walking shots at tight fields of view.

    Will the standard X300 support the converter?
    Vivo says yes. That’s new for the lineup and makes the accessory more accessible.

    Does Vivo X300 support the Zeiss 2.35x teleconverter?

    Yes. Vivo says both X300 and X300 Pro support the Zeiss 2.35x teleconverter, expanding reach beyond the native telephoto for long-range photos. The Pro claims CIPA 5.5 stabilisation and the standard model 4.5.

    Is 800mm true optical zoom on Vivo X300?

    800mm is an effective framing. The teleconverter adds optical magnification first, then the 200MP sensor crops to tighter views. It’s a hybrid approach that typically looks cleaner than digital zoom alone.

    When will the Vivo X300 series launch?

    October 13 in China at 7 pm local time, according to Vivo’s teasers and media reports. Pricing and bundles should be announced at the event.

    Which modes work with the teleconverter?

    Portraits, landscapes, and general snapshots are supported, per Vivo’s teasers. Expect best results outdoors with good light.

    Source:

    Mohammad Kashif
    Mohammad Kashif
    Topics covers smartphones, AI, and emerging tech, explaining how new features affect daily life. Reviews focus on battery life, camera behavior, update policies, and long-term value to help readers choose the right gadgets and software.

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