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AF-S 70-300VRHaving read many favourable reviews of this lens since its release last year, I thought it's time I acquired one. It is intended to compliment my existing 80-200/2.8 as a lighter weight medium tele-zoom alternative. I can already foresee myself selling the 80-200 and acquiring fast primes within this range, if I ever needed a larger aperture than the 70-300VR affords. Such is the versatility of this lens, especially the technological marvels, ie. AF-S and VR functionalities more or less masks the inadequacies of its slow aperture in many instances. Live theatre/performances w/o flash is about the only scenario I can foresee this lens being unsuited to shooting.
The VR functionality I guess is the main drawcard for this lens, compared to half as expensive third party alternatives (Sigma and Tamron 70-300s). My cynicism of any forms of optical stabilisation being an alternative to proper shooting technique aside, I believe many will find VR a helpful feature in their photography. Compared to other lenses - its closest sibling would no doubt be the previous generation 70-300G or ED, but I also think it has quite a bit in common with the 80-400VR. Both feature vibration reduction, both have the same variable aperture f/4.5-5.6, and in terms of focal range - the 70-300VR goes a bit wider but not as long, but is otherwise similar IMO. Auto focus would be faster featuring a silent wave motor instead of screw-driven via the body. An 80-200 or 70-200 f/2.8 'pro-grade' glass is obviously in a different league and aimed at a different niche to the target market for this lens. Although in terms of prices, the upgrade to the 80-200 isn't all that big of a leap - and anyone considering this lens should also consider the 80-200 IMO, esp if it's going to be your only medium tele-zoom lens. Weight and build quality - the 70-300VR features 'plastic fantastic' build and is light weight, but it's only about an inch shorter retracted than my 80-200 push-pull. When zoomed out to 300mm, it grows about 2 inches longer. The build quality is surprisingly good IMO. Zoom and focus rings glides smoothly and there's no traces of zoom creep. Comes with a faux-suede cloth pouch. Not as good as the hard cases of Nikon's pro grade glass in terms of physical protection in storage, but I guess it's better than nothing (or until you can afford a third party alternative). The HB-36 hood fits my existing 18-70. Physically fits that is, impractical in use, as it vignettes severely below 35mm. Hilariously, the length of the hood is the same as the 18-70 lens. Images - meh, I'll wait until the next model shoot I attend. Nobody wants to see shots of my backyard...
Re: AF-S 70-300VR
Surely you could go find a duck to shoot Good review, and I look forward to the samples. I'd be interested to know the lowest shutter speed for hand holding you can get away with. I imagine it would be a tough choice between an 80-200 & 70-300 if starting from scratch So join in the chorus, and sing it one and all!
Onyx, thanks for the detailed review. As someone who's contemplating the upgrade from 70-300G to 70-300VR, this extra info has certainly helped.
Thinking out loud here... Pros: - VR - silent wave motor (big plus in my books) Cons: - lower max aperture (f/4 vs f/4.5) - cost (compared to the G anyway) - extra weight I'm pretty happy with the images I've been taking with the G (where lighting permits), but I can't help but wonder if VR/SWM will allow me to use a lens of this range more often (and maybe increase the number of "keep" images). Decisions, decisions! Ben
Shooting the Mid-Summer's Night Dream at the Haven, I got the opportunity to use both the 70-300VR and 80-200 side by side.
I would have thought optical quality would be a landslide win to the f/2.8 'pro grade' glass... but no. Both lenses were used interchangeably and without referring to EXIF data, I'm not able to immediately pick which images came from which lens. I was impressed with the 70-300VR. What I thought would be the 1 main disadvantage of the 70-300 lens (ie. slow aperture, prohibitive for low light use) has made me rethink. The 70-300 resists flaring better than the 80-200 - which was a huge surprise for me. Since both were used on the edge of available light threshold (ISO3200, wide open aperture and 1/30-1/80s shutter speeds), subject movement equally applicable to both, the addition of VR somewhat helped with keepers. The extra ~1.5 stops or so gained with the 80-200 (f/2.8 vs f/4.5-5.6) was pretty much wiped out in application. It didn't afford nearly enough shutter speed for me to adequately freeze motion. In other words, I don't really miss the aperture. Pics will come shortly...
Are you still planning to post some comparision photos?
I'm really tempted to get one of these myself. From what I've read its a great performer and quite a bargin, even at AU RRP. ($850) For those that haven't seen it, heres SLRGears review: http://www.slrgear.com/reviews/showprod ... roduct=992
70-300VR
100% crop: 300mm, f/8, 1/320s, ISO180. 195mm, f/5.3(wide open), 1/30s, ISO1600. 80-200 135mm, f/3.5, 1/30s, Hi-1 (ISO3200) I've been meaning to do alot of things - amongst them processing the pics I've taken since end of Jan... I'm keen to test it out for portraiture, originally my intention of making the purchase - but I've been swamped with work and obligations of money spending in my other hobbies that I haven't attended a model shoot yet (or be online much too). I love this lens. It has made redundant my lustings for the 70-200VR. For one, I know I could live without the faster aperture; and the AF-S and VR takes it closer than my 80-200 does. Image quality is phenomenal. Not just for the price - but outright IMO.
Yep - I'm amazed by mine. The sweet spot is definately between 70-200 - the reach to 300 is just a bonus when needed. The VR is sensational at removing higher frequency movement such as hand shake, and the AF-S focusing is something a 70-300 ED user could only dream about.....
Be prepared by higher battery usage though due to all those little motors buzzing around inside it. Should I mention they're only US$479 at B&H at the moment... ? Cheers Justin
Onyx you mentioned commonality with the 80-400VR. Any more thoughts on this. I guess the glass quality is much better with the 80-400?
In the end we know Nothing, but in the meantime Learn like crazy.
Your Camera Does Matter Nikon D70 D200 D300 PPOK
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