Just got back - no real surprises really.
We were hosted by Calumet UK and treated to dinner & drinks (and more drinks - and more drinks....and then some more drinks...) by Canon UK. Had presentations and Q&A sessions with Canon, Nikon, Sigma, Noritsu and a few others hoping to land MoD contracts.
Most interesting was talking to the 'Big Guns' at Sigma...
Sigma are about to be 'very good' indeed: their new EX 85mm f/1.4 looks set to pull the rug out from under Nikon (especially) with a price of only £699 compared to a £K more for the new Nikkor. Release for that will be end of September (to Press) and in the shops in time for Xmas.
All new glassware (courtesy of Hoya who now have a proper partnership with Sigma and will manufacure all Sigma's glass) and japanese QC (facory will remain in Japan and all assembly will continue on the mainland), should address some of the haphazardness of Sigma's offerings.
Other new lenses include:
EX 120-300 f/2.8 OS, release scheduled for Spring 2011 @ £3K
EX 70-200 f/2.8 OS @ £1200
Macro 150 f/2.8 APO DG HSM with full OS throughout
300mm f/2.8 (no price yet)
400mm f/2.8 (no price yet)
Sigma SD-1 camera with a 3-layer Foveon (now fully-owned by Sigma) sensor with true-colour capture; effective equivalent of 20Mpi (64/3).
Fully weather-sealed magnesium body - should retail for about £1500.
This will have a Sigma-fit lens mount.
Sigma are going for it big style and I predict that a lot of people will be tempted away from Nikon and Canon optics if the claims we heard are even close.
The 85mm f/1.4 though...if you've just ordered the new Nikkor 85 one-four, you should cancel the order immediately and wait for the test reviews just before Xmas...
Nikon were doing some secret surveillance stuff I can't tell you about, but other than that, the hot scoop is that the 24-70 f/2.8 is much less robust than we'd been led to believe: a good, hard tap will kill the AF stone-dead and if you have to send it back to Nikon for repair, they simply replace the entire inner asssembly: as it's so complicated, it's apparently uneconomical to attemp a repair. You simply get back you original external barrel with all-new glass...
Also, if anyone with the new 70-200 f/2.8 VR-II has any slight focussing issues, you should send it back for an 'inspection' - I can't actually say more than that, but it'll come back working a lot better, put it that way.
Nikon will storm the Pro-DSLR+Video scene early next year - nuff said...
The words 'Four' and 'Dee' were mentioned.
Canon - couple of new lenses you may already know about:
EF 70-300 f/4-5.6 IS USM
300 + 400mm f/2.8 IS II USM lenses
new 1.4 and 2.0 converters which are supposed to be light-years better than the old ones they replace.
The EOS 5D II has been adopted by the Royal Navy and several Police forces as an IR-only surveillance camera; the BBC are using it to film a new wildlife series 'The Truth About Lions' with it specially-adapted for IR by ACS (cost to you for that conversion, £500)
Finally, Canon have finally secured the contract as the Royal Air Force's professional equipment supplier. All RAF photographers will now use Canon Pro bodies and lenses instead of Nikons...
We were hosted by Calumet UK and treated to dinner & drinks (and more drinks - and more drinks....and then some more drinks...) by Canon UK. Had presentations and Q&A sessions with Canon, Nikon, Sigma, Noritsu and a few others hoping to land MoD contracts.
Most interesting was talking to the 'Big Guns' at Sigma...
Sigma are about to be 'very good' indeed: their new EX 85mm f/1.4 looks set to pull the rug out from under Nikon (especially) with a price of only £699 compared to a £K more for the new Nikkor. Release for that will be end of September (to Press) and in the shops in time for Xmas.
All new glassware (courtesy of Hoya who now have a proper partnership with Sigma and will manufacure all Sigma's glass) and japanese QC (facory will remain in Japan and all assembly will continue on the mainland), should address some of the haphazardness of Sigma's offerings.
Other new lenses include:
EX 120-300 f/2.8 OS, release scheduled for Spring 2011 @ £3K
EX 70-200 f/2.8 OS @ £1200
Macro 150 f/2.8 APO DG HSM with full OS throughout
300mm f/2.8 (no price yet)
400mm f/2.8 (no price yet)
Sigma SD-1 camera with a 3-layer Foveon (now fully-owned by Sigma) sensor with true-colour capture; effective equivalent of 20Mpi (64/3).
Fully weather-sealed magnesium body - should retail for about £1500.
This will have a Sigma-fit lens mount.
Sigma are going for it big style and I predict that a lot of people will be tempted away from Nikon and Canon optics if the claims we heard are even close.
The 85mm f/1.4 though...if you've just ordered the new Nikkor 85 one-four, you should cancel the order immediately and wait for the test reviews just before Xmas...
Nikon were doing some secret surveillance stuff I can't tell you about, but other than that, the hot scoop is that the 24-70 f/2.8 is much less robust than we'd been led to believe: a good, hard tap will kill the AF stone-dead and if you have to send it back to Nikon for repair, they simply replace the entire inner asssembly: as it's so complicated, it's apparently uneconomical to attemp a repair. You simply get back you original external barrel with all-new glass...
Also, if anyone with the new 70-200 f/2.8 VR-II has any slight focussing issues, you should send it back for an 'inspection' - I can't actually say more than that, but it'll come back working a lot better, put it that way.
Nikon will storm the Pro-DSLR+Video scene early next year - nuff said...
The words 'Four' and 'Dee' were mentioned.
Canon - couple of new lenses you may already know about:
EF 70-300 f/4-5.6 IS USM
300 + 400mm f/2.8 IS II USM lenses
new 1.4 and 2.0 converters which are supposed to be light-years better than the old ones they replace.
The EOS 5D II has been adopted by the Royal Navy and several Police forces as an IR-only surveillance camera; the BBC are using it to film a new wildlife series 'The Truth About Lions' with it specially-adapted for IR by ACS (cost to you for that conversion, £500)
Finally, Canon have finally secured the contract as the Royal Air Force's professional equipment supplier. All RAF photographers will now use Canon Pro bodies and lenses instead of Nikons...
