Misprint??
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from the Christmas Jessops catalog, page 54.
I can't help thinking that there's more to this than just the body. You've already said you can't live without your 17-40L - so what piece of Nikon glass will you replace that with? They don't really make anything comparable. Plus, Nikon don't make anything like your 24-105L. (Yes you could switch to a 24-70/2.8, but you could have done that already and you haven't, so I imagine there's a reason.)
Oh and she probably hadn't got the 24-70 currently because I am lead to believe people have a dim view of this Canon lens - whereas the current Nikon 24-70 is widely regarded as "lush"![]()
Another one who is lead wrongly. There are hundreds of reviews on both at fredmiranda.com
The 24-70 F2.8 L is a fantastic lens which has attained legendary status, certainly more highly regarded than the 24-105L if image quality is what you crave for.
This is an area I do have some experience of. My 1Ds has a similar 51 point 3d tracking system to the D700 and I love it. I would not want to lose it. The 5D and 5DII have the same autofocus and I have to say.........it's not the best. Adequate is about all I can say for it but with anything moving at any kind of speed, forget it and it's not the quickest in dull conditions either. I noticed a HUGE difference with the 1Ds and I'd rather not lose that. One reason if I stay with Canon to keep the 1Ds and upgrade the 5D.
) so if this has already been said, then i'm sorry.I can't help thinking that there's more to this than just the body. You've already said you can't live without your 17-40L - so what piece of Nikon glass will you replace that with? They don't really make anything comparable. Plus, Nikon don't make anything like your 24-105L. (Yes you could switch to a 24-70/2.8, but you could have done that already and you haven't, so I imagine there's a reason.)
What lenses do you currently have, and what do you propose to swap to?
Yes, but it's f/2.8, twice the size and twice the price. If the OP wanted a lens like that, surely she'd be using the Canon 16-35mm f/2.8 already?er the 17-35 is pretty close to the 17-40. Easy to find a good one
Don't tell me, tell the OP. She's the one who's been using it in preference to a 24-70mm f/2.8.The 24-105 is a nice lens, but the f4 max apperture is to slow for weddings.
This is interesting. Don't the Canon and Nikon 24-70s have essentially the same design? There aren't many lenses which are longer at the wide end and shorter at the long end, but both of these are.Actually - whilst the 24-70L is a fine lens, it's also one with a poor rep for mis-focussing within the wedding world. I believe this is because it's a parfocal design.
And the Nikkor 24-70 certainly a better lens.
I have yet to find how such a reputation has been gained despite googling.This is interesting. Don't the Canon and Nikon 24-70s have essentially the same design? There aren't many lenses which are longer at the wide end and shorter at the long end, but both of these are.
I have yet to find how such a reputation has been gained despite googling.
Radiohead, do you have a link for this "common complaint"?
How come hundred of real-world reviewers haven't found it such a big problem?
Ooo - maybe because a lot of those reviewers are in love with the fact that it's got a red ring on it?
I can't - they take place on a closed pro-only forum. I can't post comments here. Rest assured that they are real-world pros though.
This is a start though - http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=e...1&ved=0CBMQBSgA&q=24-70L+backfocusing&spell=1
Hopefully that cuts thru a lot of the "banter" above.
Now if I'm at 200mm in a church I don't actually want the camera making that choice, I want 1/60 or 1/100 thank you. Nikon allows me to do that. Canon have tried to make it smart and instead made it dumb!
there is a silent shooting mode on the 5D2 ... There are two silent modes, but I have to point that neither of them are completely silent!
...because your opinion is worth more than hundreds of other reviewers.![]()
... I think it's a great lens BTW, but will probably add a 24-105L in addition for extra reach.
So a silent mode that isn't silent? I suppose calling it 'muffled mode' mightn't have sounded so good in the marketing blurbs![]()
Not at all, but I was getting fed up with your paranoia hijacking the thread and taking the thing off-topic.
70-200 would live nicely with the 24-70 - no need to have both then.
Alison, it might be worth mentioning that there is a silent shooting mode on the 5D2 which might be useful if you are in a church. I know it's not possible to have shutters snapping away all the time, so maybe it would make the difference between getting a shot and not
Available in live view mode only though![]()
So next to useless in a dimly lit church then... live view only uses contrast detect focusing which is slow and inaccurate compared to phase detect and definitely struggles in poor light....![]()
I decided to test that! I focused on a picture (Basil Fawlty's face) at 3200 ISO, f2.8, and 1/4 second exposure. Contrast detection struggles at lower light levels than that but I can't imagine a church would ever be that dark unless it's candle lit? Can anyone work out how that compares to the light levels at your average church wedding?
Two or three times this year I've found myself shooting at ISO 1600 at f2 just to get anywhere near 1/100 sec.
So a silent mode that isn't silent? I suppose calling it 'muffled mode' mightn't have sounded so good in the marketing blurbs![]()
BouncyMelons said:Two or three times this year I've found myself shooting at ISO 1600 at f2 just to get anywhere near 1/100 sec.
So I guess, yes it does get that dark!
I chose Canon over Nikon because the tones/contrast/colour vibrancy seem to differ noticeably between the two (and I happen to prefer the Canon-look). There are technical differences between the bodies and lenses (eg AF accuracy and ergonomics) but what about the IQ differences? I don't mean IQ of one being better than another, just that they are different. Change systems and your past work will look different to your future work (or you'll spend a long time processing to get back to where you were). That might be a good thing, of course.
Sorry guys had to go out
Current lens range includes 17-40mm because when shooting wide I really don't need f2.8 because I'm either in good light or using flash at a first dance
Then I have both the 24-70(It's a Sigma) and the 24-105mm Why? Well i bought the 24-105 as a kit with the 5d and it's great as a walk about or in a studio but you are right, I needed the 2.8. nice to have both though
Then I have the 70-200mm f2.8IS which is just a corker
Primes I have 35mm f2, 50mm f1.8, 85mm f1.8 and 100mm macro.
I'm no Nikon expert but I was looking at 14-24mm 24-70mm and 70-200mm zooms and 50mm adn 85mm primes to match the Canon ones. I could lose the 35mm and the 100mm macro and not lose too much sleep.
Flashes, straightforward change from 2 EX580s to 2 SB900s
Going to get some pricing on that little lot and see just how feasible it is/is not.
There has to be a point of reasonableness about it though. We are, after all talking about a small percentage of what I shoot being affected by a lack of performance in low light. It's not a huge deal, it does not stop me shooting now. It just means I have a little headroom because it's got a bit tight a few times this year and I'd love the technical limitations to be slightly less than they are.
And a 1D IV is not on for the simple reason that two 1 series cameras does not offer the facility to shoot one handed which is a must for me. I often shoot off camera flash where I have to with the camera in one hand and the flash in the other. It's quick and effective.
So according to my unscientific experiment and dodgy mathematics, that means the contrast detect focusing of the 5D2 will operate at 4 stops lower than Alison's light level.
Nope, shooting at F2 ISO 1600 is the same light level as shooting at F2.8 ISO 3200, so those cancel each other out (everything else being the same). The calculation is then based on 1/100 and 1/4.She had ISO1600 and you 3200 - so -1 stop to you
She had f2 and you f2.8 - so another -1 stop for you
She had 1/100 and you 1/4 so you had 4.5 stops more light
So overall you had 2.5 stops more light than she did
Not forgetting of course that 1/4 is no bloody use for her purpose - she isn't shooting still life![]()