Looking for a big more reach on an FX camera and thinking to get the Nikon AF-S 70-300mm VR. Ideally I'd like more reach, e.g. 400mm, but I'm on a tight budget. Is it worth looking at the Tamron lenses or anything else? VR is a nice to have.
Another vote for the Tamron, but I have not tried the Nikon.
As rob-nikon says, it is a little soft at full reach, but for the money I would have imagined there is little else to add to the list.
unless there is anything better for the money (£300-ish)
I agree - not about you letting yours go, but me and mine...!Another vote for the Tamron - I was a bit silly to let that one go.
Can't seem to find many Tamron's second hand. Any idea what sort of prices they go for?
I could be tempted to put my as new (and sharper than a sharp thing) Nikon 70-300 in the classifieds if I knew someone wanted one.
I haven't got around to listing it yet so yes, its still available.
Not sure I should answer in this thread. Aren't there rules on trading outside the classifieds?
Could a Mod confirm please.
I could reply quickly to a want ad though.
Tried both the nikon and tamron side by side much preferred the tamron its a great lens and comes up at bargain prices used as well.
Mm I didn't think it was tbh but sample variation and all that I guess.I had the Nikon and was very happy with it, and I would choose this over the Tamron just because it's fractionally sharper. However, for the price the Tamron can't be beaten.
Most reviews and test scores I've seen say the Nikon is marginally sharper, but it's not by much. For example it's only by 1 score on DXO. If buying both new then it's a no brainer IMO as the Nikon is not worth the extra. But I'd personally buy a used Nikon due to the build, rendering and marginal sharpness advantage. YMMVMm I didn't think it was tbh but sample variation and all that I guess.
Yeah, sharpness is perceived differently by different people and is very subjective anyway and so always best to try for yourself. Plus sharpness is only one of the aspects of a lens as we know. How a lens renders is more important to me, how much 'pop' it has, colours, contrast etc.I just judged it on hands on test and not internet test scores. Both good lenses though
It does seem there's a lot of sample variation, even with the Nikon. How did you find the difference in AF speeds for moving subjects using AF-C?I have owned both and IMO the Tamron had more pop than the Nikon on my different copies, the Nikon does seem to be slightly better built though.
It does seem there's a lot of sample variation, even with the Nikon. How did you find the difference in AF speeds for moving subjects using AF-C?
Thanks for this. Strange about your Nikon, are you sure you had the VR version as mine had nice pop?IIRC there wasn't any noticeable difference for AF, I was using DX at the time. At one point I had the Tamron & Nikon versions together and after comparing I went with the Tamron due to the "pop" as I found the Nikon lacked contrast and seemed very flat. I sold the Nikon version. Also, I have owned another two copies of the Tamron since switching to FF.
As a cheap route, I have also found the Sigma 70-300mm APO's to be very good and I have one now as a lightweight option on the D810. I think a couple of members bought one on the D750 thread after seeing some of the results.
Slight side note: I know you spent some time looking at a quality compacts, any reason why you didn't choose the Panasonic LX100 over the Canon?
Thanks for this. Strange about your Nikon, are you sure you had the VR version as mine had nice pop?
As for the compacts it had to be pocketable, the LX100 is a bit bulky in comparison.
DSC_2563 by Swansea Jack, on Flickr