EF 70-200 F/4 L or Canon EF 70-300mm f/4-5.6 USM IS

They seem around the same price according to http://photography-on-the.net/forum/showthread.php?t=141406

Im guessing that the L glass is a lot better but is 200 enough for wildlife?

Or should I get what I can afford and buy the EF-S 55-250 f/4-5.6 IS.

I have a 400D


Actually the 'L' glass is not a lot better. In fact I'd go as far as to say that the 70-300 is every bit as good as the 70-200 optically (I have both). Where the 70-300 does fall down is in the build quality, a non ring USM focusing (so no FTM) and by the fact that the front element rotates during focusing so using a polariser is difficult. BUT, the 70-300mm does have IS making the lens very useable hand held all the way up to 300. Cost wise from what I see the L is about £100 more expensive.

I took this the other day with the 70-300mm on a 400D

IMG_20080619_2482.jpg
 
..ahem... cough... cough..

That's what I thought until I tried the 70-200L. There is no comparison, once you learn how to use it (which takes a little time). I had a 75-300 IS. It went on fleabay about a week after I got the 70-200.

The f4 version is a bit sharper than the f2.8 which I have, but the sharpness, tonal quality, depth of colour of the images. you have to try for yourself.


However if you need 300mm then adding a 1.4tc onto a 200 doesnt do it justice, unless its stopped down. You can get good shots, at least as good as the 70-300, but you'll be disappointed when you compare them to the vanilla 70-200 images.

There's a reason why lots of us forsake the extra 100mm and live with a 70-200, and it's not hard to live with either.
 
..ahem... cough... cough..

That's what I thought until I tried the 70-200L. There is no comparison, once you learn how to use it (which takes a little time). I had a 75-300 IS. It went on fleabay about a week after I got the 70-200......................


OG, how did the 75-300 get in on the act? I thought we were comparing the 70-300 to a 70-200. The 75-300mm is generally considered to be a poor lens compared against anything.



(edit for typo)
 
rgrebby,

just seen your website, and you're taking some good interesting photos. I've got the 70-300 f4-5.6 USM IS lens after reading the same review as above as well as others. You've got the extra 100mm and IS.

I use mine for sports and have some shots from Le Mans last week here:

http://www.walles.co.uk/gallery/lemans

90% of the shots (except the night time shots taken with sigma 24-70 f2.8) are with the 70-300 lens. I realise it's a different subject to what you do. Perhaps some others would care to comment on the shots, but I think they come out pretty nice. All the shots are out the camera (Canon 40d) although some have been cropped. Only 5/6 of them were modified adjusting the colour curve to make them darker as they were a tad underexposed, that's all.

Chris
 
I was faced with the same decision last September, and after much thinking I ended up going with the 70-300IS as I felt I really needed the extra reach and as a consequence I would also need IS which a 70-200 f4 + 1.4x TC wouldnt offer me.

I've been very pleased with the results so far :)
 
70-200 is an amazing lens, used mine again for the first time in a while last week and had forgotten just how much of a joy it is to use.
 
check your PMs rgrebby.

Pete
 
Canon EF 70-300mm f/4-5.6 USM IS

for the (new) price of the above you could buy a (used) 300mm f4 L on flea bay

no questions about quality here - i brought mine for ~£300 - no IS - so what? - learn to hold the camera / lens or use bean bag /monopod /tripod take great shots and smile at the results....

400mm f5.6? L hard to find a cheap one - people keep them as they do the job - 300 + 1.4x works ok but not as good as 400mm f5.6 but a cheaper route
 
..ahem... cough... cough..
That's what I thought until I tried the 70-200L. There is no comparison, once you learn how to use it (which takes a little time). There's a reason why lots of us forsake the extra 100mm and live with a 70-200, and it's not hard to live with either.

I concur 100%
The 70-300 IS was ( is) a capable enough lens
( It can be a bit soft on the far end ( at least mine was)
But I "swapped" mine for a 70-200 and never looked back.
Though as Mr git say's "they do take a little getting used to, I found its almost like a running in period, for some reason....
 
I use the 70-300 IS for motorsport and have for quite some time now. At the long end it does tail off a bit, but nothing like I have seen other stuff do.

I usually try to stick below about 250mm, but don't really worry if I end up at 300mm.

This might sound like sacriledge, but I also have a 300 F4 L and quite often the 70-300 actually outperforms the 300 in terms of focus speed and accuracy - and I spend 99% of my photography time shooting cars and bikes at race circuits.

The 70-300 is a far better lens than most would have you believe. I thought about replacing it with a 70-200 but whilst I accept there would be a difference, I cannot justify the expense for a little improvement (and I use a friends 70-200 F2.8 from time to time, so I know what I am talking about).

Only downsides are the rotating front element when you zoom (makes CPL's a problem) and that the Canon 1.4x TC won't really work with it properly. If you need those two things, get the 70-200 F4 or F2.8 L. And of course its not constant aperture, again, not a problem for me.

Other than that ~300 quid gets you a very capable lens with a good focal length range.
 
70-200 has better IQ but not by much. The 70-300 has very good IQ and it is 100mm longer

some people are bothered by having white lenses and don't want to draw attention to themselves as well
 
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