James Lin
Active member
Hey Greg, how would you describe the BGN rating for KEH? I've been tempted to order BGN lenses, but I've never been too sure about it. Do you think they're conservative with their ratings?
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--This may help.
Full size JPEGs, K10D, Raw -> ACR > PS CS2 -> Unsharp mask applied
60% at 0.6 pix to all, saved at High (8).
FA*300/4.5 @ f5.6 v Tamron 70-300 LD Di at 300mm @ f5.6 (a cruel
test!)
FA*300
http://www.zen70100.zen.co.uk/jpgfiles/lens%20tests/FA300_5-6.jpg
Tamron
http://www.zen70100.zen.co.uk/jpgfiles/lens%20tests/TAM300_5-6.jpg
DA 50-200 at 200mm @ f5.6 v Tamron 70-300 LD Di at 200mm @ f5.6
DA 50-200
http://www.zen70100.zen.co.uk/jpgfiles/lens%20tests/DA50-200_200_5-6.jpg
Tamron
http://www.zen70100.zen.co.uk/jpgfiles/lens%20tests/TAM300_200_5-6.jpg
I think the Tam does rather well, however you can see the well
documented purplish effect on the roof rings in the 300mm shot at
f5.6, it almost clears by f8.0. It's hardly visible in the 200mm
shots as it is stopped down 2/3rds of a stop from wide open (f4.5)
at 200mm. Used with a bit of care, it's a great cheap lens.
--
Richard Day - 'Carpe Diem!'
Gloucester UK
Interesting when people say $170 is dirt cheap when its actually available all day long at $149.If I can expect this level of performance
form this Tamron I might just pick it up as its dirt cheap at $170
or so. Interesting.
I've bought 2 bargain lenses from them, and they've both been great. The rating means that there will be cosmetic problems and wear (although in my case not much), but nothing that will effect optics or operation of the lens. Although they never come with lens caps (either end).Hey Greg, how would you describe the BGN rating for KEH? I've been
tempted to order BGN lenses, but I've never been too sure about it.
Do you think they're conservative with their ratings?
--
--Interesting when people say $170 is dirt cheap when its actuallyIf I can expect this level of performance
form this Tamron I might just pick it up as its dirt cheap at $170
or so. Interesting.
available all day long at $149.
Larry
--Alfisti,
Are you sure you want to cart around a manual focus long prime lens?
Having canoed through Algonquin in my younger days I wonder if you
will find it inconvenient to canoe & portage the 2+ kg of lens plus
tripod that will be needed to use such a lens. Having said this,
the moose and loons are certainly plentiful there and using a long
lens to capture a pair of loons with their chicks would be quite a
coup.
If you want to pursue this path, someone at Pentax Forums is
selling a 400mm prime + TC in the price range you specified.
Otherwise I would also suggest you consider the FA80-320/5.6 lens.
It's a decent performer and available on flea-Bay for under $200.
Have fun!
--To ask a question which might focus your thinking, what kind of
weight and portability were you hoping for?
The Tamron 70-300 Di is not only cheap, but also light compared to
a 300mm prime. The downside is of course the PF.
The Pentax 80-320 can be found on eBay secondhand for a price just
a bit more than the Tamron, but the some versions have reliability
issues---search for 80-320 on DPReview, there's a thread about
them---IIRC the automatic aperture hardware is fragile. This
scared me away from them.
The 50-200 with the 1.4x TC is even lighter than the Tamron, but
the flaky autofocus on early morning bird shots was driving me
crazy. Manual focus worked fine when the birds sat still, but I
was losing too many shots to moving birds and hunting AF. Not a
lens issue, the 50-200 is great, but F5.6 plus a stop for the TC is
going to cause AF issues.
If weight is no object and AF isn't essential, you'll get the best
images with a second-hand 300mm prime. But the ones I looked at
weighed a lot more than the Tamron.
--Brett
--Check out some of the tests I did last year, with photos of the
various lenses to compare portability.
http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/read.asp?forum=1036&message=19800851
--
Mike
There are holes in the sky
Where the rain gets in,
But they're ever so small
That's why rain is thin. ..... Spike Milligan
--This may help.
Full size JPEGs, K10D, Raw -> ACR > PS CS2 -> Unsharp mask applied
60% at 0.6 pix to all, saved at High (8).
FA*300/4.5 @ f5.6 v Tamron 70-300 LD Di at 300mm @ f5.6 (a cruel
test!)
FA*300
http://www.zen70100.zen.co.uk/jpgfiles/lens%20tests/FA300_5-6.jpg
Tamron
http://www.zen70100.zen.co.uk/jpgfiles/lens%20tests/TAM300_5-6.jpg
DA 50-200 at 200mm @ f5.6 v Tamron 70-300 LD Di at 200mm @ f5.6
DA 50-200
http://www.zen70100.zen.co.uk/jpgfiles/lens%20tests/DA50-200_200_5-6.jpg
Tamron
http://www.zen70100.zen.co.uk/jpgfiles/lens%20tests/TAM300_200_5-6.jpg
I think the Tam does rather well, however you can see the well
documented purplish effect on the roof rings in the 300mm shot at
f5.6, it almost clears by f8.0. It's hardly visible in the 200mm
shots as it is stopped down 2/3rds of a stop from wide open (f4.5)
at 200mm. Used with a bit of care, it's a great cheap lens.
--
Richard Day - 'Carpe Diem!'
Gloucester UK
Excellent tip. I had missed that. Thanks for posting this link.Look at this post.
http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/read.asp?forum=1036&message=22378819
--
Richard Day - 'Carpe Diem!'
Gloucester UK
--Yes,
The Tamron he tested is the old Tamron design. Not the new Di that
is a much better lens & design.
The new one is available here:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=160093744507
Larry