I'd agree, over-priced, the Sony FE70-300 G should have come in cheaper than the 70-200mm f4 imo, I'd still get the 70-200mm f4 and crop, I'm sure it'll still be better than the 70-300mm at the 300mm end!
Correct, make no mistake, Sony is out to make money..... honestly, having used the FE70-200mm f4 and doing extreme crops, it will be as good if not better than the FE70-300mm G in my opinion.Yeah, tbh, they could've rather made the 1.4x TC compatible with the 70-200 f4 instead of just the GM... but why would they do that when they can release a £1150 lens to give you the extra 100mm.
Having owned both the A7 and A7II, I'd probably go for the A7 and put the rest towards good glass.Thinking of joining the club. Answer me a simple question please. a7 with more budget for lenses or fork out more for the a7ii?
Having owned both the A7 and A7II, I'd probably go for the A7 and put the rest towards good glass.
With the A7, you will lose IBIS, uncompressed RAW, improved ergonomics and marginally poorer AF.
You're right, these aren't really the same. Fuji don't make one the same but they do make expensive slow APS-C zooms yet you're here critisising Sony. Again.
Several of the usuals seem to make premium expensive slow zooms. The new Sony looks to be expensive but not outlandishly so in this company and I'd rather drop the "slow" critisism as several manufacturers seem to make expensive slow zooms and hope that the performance is equal to or better than the similar slow lenses from the competition and also that the price looks reasonable once we know how it performs and what the street price is 6 months to a year from now.
Did I say they didn't sell slow zooms?
depends if the ibis is useful or you want to use canon lenses ?
If you want to use canon glass then in my opinion you need the mkiii it makes use of pdaf focus and is a lot faster.to focus with the Canon glass another advantage is that the ibis also stabilises the Canon glassCan you explain this to me as a sony newbie please. I do have access to a selection of canon EF and EFS lenses. I'd need an adapter either way right? Metabones am I right in saying?
No, but what you did is criticised Sony for doing what multiple other manufacturers are doing... making premium variable aperture zooms.
Yes, the Sony is at the expensive end on day one but after six months or a year the price may drop to Canon L slow and expensive variable aperture zoom money.
It all hangs on if the lens is any good, if it isn't then it's a rip off but if it's as good or better than the premium zooms from other manufacturers I'm sure there'll be a queue round the block. Lets wait and see.
Just stick a Canon 24-70 and your laughing. Same weight and size as the g master one lolDifferent focal ranges, but I'd agree, for the money the FE24-70mm is also poo but it's nicer poo as its Sony Zeiss lol![]()
Where do you get your pricing? The newer vrii of that lens is only 400 odd quid BRAND new, The vr1 was never 700 quid!
The older g lens is like 100 quid at most.
Alright Alan but do you think that...
...Canon, who do the £800 L zoom, have one that is £400 and you can buy the compatible Tamron for £250, alongside the ridiculous price one.
At a guess, he was looking at the wrong lens. I bet it's the 1 series range of lens, for the Nikon. That lens is meant to be excellent and gives you FL equivalent of 189mm > 810mm which puts it in the same type of bracket as the Tamron and Sigma 150-600mm super zooms. A bit different to compare against the FF version 70-300mm lenses being discussed. How a slow lens can be defended for this price seems strange IMO, you could have the excellent 300mm f4 primes cheaper for Canon and Nikon mounts over Sony's 70-300mm.
Here we go with the costs again...Just buy the Tamron and be happy... I paid more than that for my Canon 70-300mm which was optically average and mechanically poor and I'll be amazed if that Tamron gives comparable image quality to the new Sony but lets wait for the reviews.
My things were computers, electronics and compliance not marketing. I'd imagine that Sony have had a good hard look at strategy and marketing and they've decided the direction they want to go in and it seems to be towards a higher end system. Their company, their money, good luck to them. Having said that there is evidence that they're willing to adapt and change direction a little too, as per the cheaper 50mm and lossless files etc.
I think I'll bow out of this discussion as you and others will see me as a Sony apologist whereas I just see myself as adding a little balance to the same old Sony are too expensive and I can buy something else for less argument we go through every few pages in this thread. Fine, go buy something else. That's what I did when I splashed out just under £1k on kit recently.
If you're talking about me these's no need to guess as I gave model numbers. My point was that other companies make expensive slow lenses, and they're sometimes not even FF. Also you have to try and remember that the Sony hasn't even hit the shops yet. Prices on day 1 are usually higher than they are a few months to a year later but here we are obsessed with a Sony announcement of high end slow zoom costing over £1k before there are any reviews. If it's a very high quality lens maybe it'll be worth the money, if the street price drops maybe it'll be even more worth it.
Patience grasshoppers.
I agree, get the FE70-200mm f4 G OSSMy point wasn't down to the sharpness of the lens or its AF speed because I'd expect those to be a given. My issue is, being a photographer that isn't "considerably richer than you..." I don't see how anyone can see a £1k variable aperture lens as being good value for money! By all means go and spend over a grand for a slow lens.
edinburgh-284.jpg by Jonathan Richards, on Flickr
edinburgh-270.jpg by Jonathan Richards, on Flickr
edinburgh-226.jpg by Jonathan Richards, on Flickr
edinburgh-211.jpg by Jonathan Richards, on Flickr
edinburgh-139.jpg by Jonathan Richards, on Flickr
edinburgh-48-Pano.jpg by Jonathan Richards, on Flickr
untitled-199.jpg by Jonathan Richards, on Flickr
untitled-180.jpg by Jonathan Richards, on Flickr
Lumeire central London-77.jpg by Jonathan Richards, on FlickrEnough talk
post some pics
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edinburgh-284.jpg by Jonathan Richards, on Flickr
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edinburgh-270.jpg by Jonathan Richards, on Flickr
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edinburgh-226.jpg by Jonathan Richards, on Flickr
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edinburgh-211.jpg by Jonathan Richards, on Flickr
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edinburgh-139.jpg by Jonathan Richards, on Flickr
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edinburgh-48-Pano.jpg by Jonathan Richards, on Flickr
Where on earth did I say it was good value for money?My point wasn't down to the sharpness of the lens or its AF speed because I'd expect those to be a given. My issue is, being a photographer that isn't "considerably richer than you..." I don't see how anyone can see a £1k variable aperture lens as being good value for money! By all means go and spend over a grand for a slow lens.
Where on earth did I say it was good value for money?
"..if it's better than the L but a bit more expensive then as far as I care it'll be well done Sony"
Like you say, it's not worth carrying on because I'm not going to be spending £1k on any lens at the moment, let alone this one. I don't post similar comments in the CaNikon threads because I don't own a CaNikon anymore, I own Sony kit.
As for being too selective in my criticism, the aperture range is a fact of the lens. Sony might drop the price by a few hundred quid eventually but it's still going to be slow. As for the Fuji kit, yes I agree that £1300 is a lot for an Aps-C body but as I don't shoot Fuji is less interest to me.
Na mate. Fuji can't be that good? Rather canon or sigmaI must admit if sony had fuji lenses and fuji had sony bodies that would be a killer system!
16mm is wide tbh should have you well covered without pano if not do you know how to stitch shots?
Fuji lenses are amazing mate tbh the primes are awesome I had a bad experience with the cat 1 when it first came out so put me offNa mate. Fuji can't be that good? Rather canon or sigma
"..if it's better than the L but a bit more expensive then as far as I care it'll be well done Sony"
Like you say, it's not worth carrying on because I'm not going to be spending £1k on any lens at the moment, let alone this one. I don't post similar comments in the CaNikon threads because I don't own a CaNikon anymore, I own Sony kit.
As for being too selective in my criticism, the aperture range is a fact of the lens. Sony might drop the price by a few hundred quid eventually but it's still going to be slow. As for the Fuji kit, yes I agree that £1300 is a lot for an Aps-C body but as I don't shoot Fuji is less interest to me.
I must admit if sony had fuji lenses and fuji had sony bodies that would be a killer system!
Not stitched any before, I have CC , just not had the time to do much more than the basic tweaks that are needed. Any tips?
Better then sigma art and canon L?Fuji lenses are amazing mate tbh the primes are awesome I had a bad experience with the cat 1 when it first came out so put me off