dougdarter
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 2,099
- Name
- Douglas
- Edit My Images
- Yes
Hi,
This hefty hunk of glass arrived this morning, and first impressions were very favourable. It is extremely well bolted together, and the finish is well above average, certainly better than any contemporary Nikon lens that I have seen. Zooming is smooth and unremarkable, and there is absolutely no sign of 'droop' if the lens is pointed downwards with the zoom set at 18mm. There is a lock should this become a problem as the lens gets older. A decent petal shaped lens hood is included. Extension at 300mm is not as long as some I have seen, but still looks daft!
AF isn't as fast as I would like, and the lens hunts above 200mm unless you start to focus from wide angle. VC mode is excellent, and it is quite obvious in use - the image stabilisation is very noticeable, especially through the viewfinder. The downside is that the VC motor is quite noisy... sounds a bit like a drain! How good is it?? We shall see.
This is a series of shots taken at various focal lengths marked on the barrel. The camera was hand held, and the exposures were taken with programme mode. I wanted the camera and lens to demonstrate how good the combo is without any input from the handler. Jpegs are fine quality, 3mp in size. All other camera settings were neutral.
28mm
35mm
50mm
100mm
200mm
300mm
This is a 100% crop from the 300mm image. It is still very sharp at an effective 60mm, certainly useable without any PP.
Macro is pretty good as well!
It is obvious from the pictues, that the IQ is never going to compete with a prime lens at any given focal length, but I believe that it competes with any O/E zoom lens, particularly with this range, and it is perhaps a little better than many, especially at it's price of £500.
I have to admit that I am extremely happy with the quality and the functionality of this equipment, though a 300 Nikon prime is now winging it's way to me courtesy of nice Mr Fforde.
This hefty hunk of glass arrived this morning, and first impressions were very favourable. It is extremely well bolted together, and the finish is well above average, certainly better than any contemporary Nikon lens that I have seen. Zooming is smooth and unremarkable, and there is absolutely no sign of 'droop' if the lens is pointed downwards with the zoom set at 18mm. There is a lock should this become a problem as the lens gets older. A decent petal shaped lens hood is included. Extension at 300mm is not as long as some I have seen, but still looks daft!
AF isn't as fast as I would like, and the lens hunts above 200mm unless you start to focus from wide angle. VC mode is excellent, and it is quite obvious in use - the image stabilisation is very noticeable, especially through the viewfinder. The downside is that the VC motor is quite noisy... sounds a bit like a drain! How good is it?? We shall see.
This is a series of shots taken at various focal lengths marked on the barrel. The camera was hand held, and the exposures were taken with programme mode. I wanted the camera and lens to demonstrate how good the combo is without any input from the handler. Jpegs are fine quality, 3mp in size. All other camera settings were neutral.
28mm
35mm
50mm
100mm
200mm
300mm
This is a 100% crop from the 300mm image. It is still very sharp at an effective 60mm, certainly useable without any PP.
Macro is pretty good as well!
It is obvious from the pictues, that the IQ is never going to compete with a prime lens at any given focal length, but I believe that it competes with any O/E zoom lens, particularly with this range, and it is perhaps a little better than many, especially at it's price of £500.
I have to admit that I am extremely happy with the quality and the functionality of this equipment, though a 300 Nikon prime is now winging it's way to me courtesy of nice Mr Fforde.