Sootchucker
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Having just had an unexpected tax rebate (whoo-hoo) I have been contemplating long lens choices for micro four thirds of which they are currently two front runners. The Olympus 300mm F4 Pro and the Panasonic Leica 100-400 F4-6.3 OIS.
Whilst musing between these two lenses, (and there's a big price difference between them), I was thinking how usable they would be in the typical British light.Having looked back at some images done a couple of years ago with my Panasonic 100-300 on an EM5, I can see that even to get a shutter speed of around 1/125 sec at F5.6, my ISO's were up around 2500-3200, unless the bird was in bright sunlight.Now I am a huge fan of micro four thirds and have a GX8 and an EM1 along with far too many lenses, so I'm not knocking the format, and I absolutely love them for what they are, small light and an ideal camera with enough pixels and quality for 80% of my needs. However currently when the light levels drop, out comes my Nikon D500 or D750 with the Nikon 300mm F4 AFS or the Tamron 150-600 F4-6.3.
My question is, undoubtedly as excellent as the two M4/3 lenses surely are, as they are both aperture limited (i.e not F2.8), which would have no doubt made them incredibly expensive and huge, are long lenses for M4/3 a viable alternative for a APS-C or FF DSLR shooter, or are we a generation or two of M4/3 sensors before that happens. The typical subjects for these lenses tend to be wildlife (although not exclusively), which normally means shade or low light levels with relatively high ISO's.
Whilst purchasing the Panasonic at least, wouldn't be a problem for me financially, (and I do like the idea of having a complete M4/3 system), I'm just wondering how effective they are when the ISO's level's go north ? I know that for ultimate quality the Nikon's would pee all over the M4/3 system, but they do weigh a relative tonne in comparison, so if backpacking for some distance, the M4/3 format does still appeal to be a second wildlife system.
For those that use either these two lenses or DSLR users (go on then, Canon and Sony users are allowed as well
), what are people's thoughts, on quality / effectiveness vs. price and convenience ?
Note this discussion has nothing to do with how much equipment I may or may not own, it's purely for subjective comments about long lens photography on the current M3/4 Olympus and Panasonic bodies.
Whilst musing between these two lenses, (and there's a big price difference between them), I was thinking how usable they would be in the typical British light.Having looked back at some images done a couple of years ago with my Panasonic 100-300 on an EM5, I can see that even to get a shutter speed of around 1/125 sec at F5.6, my ISO's were up around 2500-3200, unless the bird was in bright sunlight.Now I am a huge fan of micro four thirds and have a GX8 and an EM1 along with far too many lenses, so I'm not knocking the format, and I absolutely love them for what they are, small light and an ideal camera with enough pixels and quality for 80% of my needs. However currently when the light levels drop, out comes my Nikon D500 or D750 with the Nikon 300mm F4 AFS or the Tamron 150-600 F4-6.3.
My question is, undoubtedly as excellent as the two M4/3 lenses surely are, as they are both aperture limited (i.e not F2.8), which would have no doubt made them incredibly expensive and huge, are long lenses for M4/3 a viable alternative for a APS-C or FF DSLR shooter, or are we a generation or two of M4/3 sensors before that happens. The typical subjects for these lenses tend to be wildlife (although not exclusively), which normally means shade or low light levels with relatively high ISO's.
Whilst purchasing the Panasonic at least, wouldn't be a problem for me financially, (and I do like the idea of having a complete M4/3 system), I'm just wondering how effective they are when the ISO's level's go north ? I know that for ultimate quality the Nikon's would pee all over the M4/3 system, but they do weigh a relative tonne in comparison, so if backpacking for some distance, the M4/3 format does still appeal to be a second wildlife system.
For those that use either these two lenses or DSLR users (go on then, Canon and Sony users are allowed as well
Note this discussion has nothing to do with how much equipment I may or may not own, it's purely for subjective comments about long lens photography on the current M3/4 Olympus and Panasonic bodies.
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