Welcome to WhatBird Forums Sign in | Join | Help
in Search

Whatbird.com

Lens choice dilemma

Last post 01-07-2009, 12:22 PM by CMF. 6 replies.
Sort Posts: Previous Next
  •  12-07-2008, 7:53 PM 68207

    Lens choice dilemma

    Hard lens choice

     

    I have already outgrown my 70-300AF-S VR Nikkor and longing for a 400+ with the same VR & AF-S for my D80. I have a couple questions for those who walk with the heavy logs and stretch out their glass. Let me start with the type of birding I usually do which is on trails and hikes. Currently I do not carry a tripod and do not tire from holding my light weight 2.2lb. Nikkor 70-300MM f/4.5-5.6G ED-IF AF-S VR aiming for long periods. Now the two lens I am interested in are the Nikkor 200-400 f/4G IF-ED AF-S VR at 7.2lbs OR Nikkor 300mm f/2.8G ED-IF II AF-S VR + TC-17E II 1.7x AF-S

     (6.38lbs + TC.5lb) 6.88lbs.

    I am looking for opinions on either lens choice and the ability to hand hold each. Both are practically the same $ and reviews are stellar on both.

     

    300mm f/2.8G ED-IF II AF-S VR

    TC-17E II 1.7x AF-S

     

    200-400 f/4G IF-ED AF-S VR

     

    CMF

     

  •  12-19-2008, 9:32 AM 69358 in reply to 68207

    Re: Lens choice dilemma

    I've owned the Nikkor 200-400mm AF-S VR lens, and although it's highly touted by nearly all the lens experts I've read, I must confess that mine seemed to be a bit lacking. Maybe it was user error or a bad sample. I often photograph waterfowl (in warm weather) on a lake from a kayak and thought the VR would help greatly, but my previous non-VR 500mm Nikkor always seemed to deliver sharper photos.

    One other option you might consider is the Sigma APO 150-500mm f/5-6.3 DG OS HSM lens. It has optical stabilization, is amazingly compact, and is quite lightweight for hand-holding. I've just begun to use mine and am quite pleased with the results, both hand-held and on a mono-pod. There is also a 1.4 teleconverter available for it. All for under a grand. Of course, it is slower than the Nikkors and perhaps not quite as sharp wide open.

     Best,

    Doug 

  •  12-19-2008, 10:54 PM 69475 in reply to 68207

    Re: Lens choice dilemma

    I don't know much about Nikon lens However I feel you already know what you want here is my suggestion you say you don't carry a tripod have you given any thought to a mono pod not only do they make a nice steady platform for your camera  they also can double up as a hiking stick .. Smile
    My New Avatar is in memory of Nancy my darling wife of 10 years who passed away on Monday November the 16th 2009 after an illness

    My photo gallery http://thekiwi.org/photography/index.php
  •  12-20-2008, 6:22 AM 69491 in reply to 69475

    Re: Lens choice dilemma

    A monopod will be attached to this lens and I have been researching for a week plus and only getting more confused. The monopod will definitely be carbon fiber but the mount choice is giving me adgida.

    CMF

  •  01-02-2009, 5:08 PM 71231 in reply to 69491

    Re: Lens choice dilemma

    Don't bother getting the 300+teleconverter, it only degrades the image quality. I don't know about the 200-400, but I own the Sigma 120-400 OS (which is their VR). It has great quality and is around 4 pounds,  think. So it's lighter and also much cheaper than the Nikkor.

    I easily handhold it and the shots are crisp to around 1/40 second at 400mm.

     

     Good luck.


    Lifers: 134

    Recent additions: Black-throated Green Warbler, Tennessee Warbler, Great Horned Owl
    Favorites: Osprey, American Kestrel, Reddish Egret
  •  01-07-2009, 12:07 PM 72111 in reply to 71231

    Re: Lens choice dilemma

    Just remember for wild bird photography longer is better! Period.

     

     
    Larry
    http://MostlyBirds.com
  •  01-07-2009, 12:22 PM 72118 in reply to 72111

    Re: Lens choice dilemma

    I pulled the trigger on the Nikkor 200-400 f/4G IF-ED AF-S VR. It arrived two days ago and it has stopped raining yet! Gitzo CF monopod and a Really RS MH-01 / B2-Pro clamp. What a lens, I got the chills when I saw it.

    CMF

View as RSS news feed in XML