thunder storm wrote:
MAC wrote:
thunder storm wrote:
MAC wrote:
Sigma 150-600mm f/5-6.3 DG OS HSM Contemporary Lens 745-101 B&H (bhphotovideo.com)
for $899 and cost of a monopod, this may be your best bet
Alastair moved to the RF mount very recently, so it might be a bit to early for suggestions like this.
2Kg, 268mm..................
see link
Re: EOS RP, Super Telephoto Options: Canon EOS R Talk Forum: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)
I'll take "fairly decent job" for 1/3 the price for BIF
Alastair, like me, is not into expensive lenses
I didn't mean price/performance ratio, I meant size & weight.
Well, it's Alastair making choices here, but my bet would be he isn't going to accept 2Kg & 27mm.
Thanks for all the suggestions. You're right that size and weight is a big consideration for me. More weight than size really. I'm now torn between one of the 100-400 options (probably Tamron) and the Sigma 150-600. As I see it, the 150-600 is much more of a specialty lens, whereas I could see myself using the 100-400 a fair bit on both my M6II and my R. It might work fairly well on either for outdoor sports (mostly running for me, but I've always wanted to have a go at lacrosse or football (the kind with the feet), as well as birds. I see the 150-600 as something that's mostly for birds, and I just don't know how much I'm likely to do that. I find lugging around my 70-200 plus 2X extender a bit of a pain, and the 150-600 is even heavier and longer. I have a monopod, which I bought many years ago, when my first 70-200 was the unstabilized F4 version. I've barely used it since getting my first stabilized 70-200. A compromise would be to use my 1.4X extender on the 100-400 when I really need the extra reach. I know I would lose a stop over the 150-600 that way (and get 560 instead of 600), but I've found my Kenko Pro 1.4X to give excellent results, and I've never noticed any slowdown in AF from it. The 1.4X is also pretty small and light. It would be F9 at 560mm, which is still 2/3 stop faster than the 600 F11.
Ah well, lots to think about. Since looking at the two 100-400 options (Tamron and Sigma) and the Sigma 150-600 on Adorama, I've been getting emails from them at least twice a day, reminding me to buy! I expect I'll do some more mulling over. If anything more occurs, feel free to chime in. I'd be interested to hear from anyone who's used the Tamron 100-400 on the R or M6II (or both). Someone reported that the AF on the Tamron is a lot better on the R6 than on the M5. But my two cameras are in between those two for AF. Both the M6II and the R have much better AF than the M5, but not as good as the R6. From the various reports I read, I'm guessing that they are closer to the R6 than the M5. I know that my M6II was a huge step up from my M6, which is at least as good as the M5, and I find the R to be pretty similar to the M6II in AF.
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As the length of a thread approaches 150, the probability that someone will make the obvious "it's not the camera, it's the photographer" remark approaches 1.
Alastair
http://anorcross.smugmug.com
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