Which 24-70 for my D600....?

Get a Tamron 28-75mm f/2.8 and save a shed load of cash


Dont underestimate this advise - at the price its hard to beat, I will be getting one as a backup to a Nikon offering - As I already bought the Nikon I will keep it But the Tammy is a worthy bit of glass:thumbs:
 
If the Tammy 17-50 [non VC] for DX is anything to go buy, they do good short zoom.

I wouldn't buy anything bar their newer 24-70 VC for FX though. It is their newest, and by all accounts best short FX zoom. It's also obviously got that VC as a bonus and it's about £450 less than the Nikon.
 
The Nikon 28-70 definitely seems to be harder to find. Grays of Westminster has one, but it's £885....

Have a look at ApertureUK they have one listed at £690 ... with 6 months warranty.
 
Yup, but be careful, there are 2 versions, one with a built in AF motor and one without, if your camera has a built in AF motor get the lens without the motor as it can cause silly things to happen otherwise.
Wow, you leave the forum for a couple of days and look what happens. Thank you all for the input.

Is this the Tamron 28-75 that people are bringing up?

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Tamron-SP-AF-28-75mm-f-2-8-f2-8-XR-Di-LD-for-Nikon-/220885086974?pt=Camera_Lenses&hash=item336dc6f2fe

The Nikon 28-70 definitely seems to be harder to find. Grays of Westminster has one, but it's £885....
 
Gary Coyle said:
Yup, but be careful, there are 2 versions, one with a built in AF motor and one without, if your camera has a built in AF motor get the lens without the motor as it can cause silly things to happen otherwise.

Iirc the one without built in motor is with an aperture ring. So if the image is of the actual lens it should be ok :)
 
does your body have an in built focus motor, if so does your tamron have the inbuilt focus motor, if so theres your problem, there are 2 different models, choose the wrong one and you have bought a dog

I thought Gary was being a bit dramatic when I first read this , but having now owned and used both, he is absolutely spot on. In good light not too much of an issue but the bim on a body with a motor hunted a lot in low light. Optically the BIM seemed good for the price however.

non bim:


Tamron test by Sir SR, on Flickr

bim:


Sister in law Tamron test by Sir SR, on Flickr

S
 
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