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Thread: Longer and slower, or shorter and faster?

  1. #1
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    Longer and slower, or shorter and faster?



    Hi guys, I am looking for a medium telephoto lens, and was wondering if I should get a faster, shorter lens (i.e 300mm f 4) or a slower, longer lens (i.e 400mm f 5.6).


    I will be using the lens as a bird photography lens for travel.


    I have a price limit of $2000.


    Any suggestions or tips would be really appreciated.


    Thanks!


    Brendan



  2. #2
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    Re: Longer and slower, or shorter and faster?



    Quote Originally Posted by Brendan Burns
    I will be using the lens as a bird photography lens for travel.

    That's easy! 400mm f/5.6. It's longer *and* sharper than the 300mm f/4. It doesn't have IS, but it really is just that much sharper.


    Quote Originally Posted by Brendan Burns
    I have a price limit of $2000.

    That's too bad. Canon's birding lens range goes like this:


    $1150 -> 400mm f/5.6
    $5800 -> 500mm f/4
    $7600 -> 600mm f/4
    $10,600 -> 800mm f/5.6


    As you can see, there is a big gap between $1000 and $6000. Ideally, Canon would release a 500mm f/5.6 IS for $3000 or less, which would allow folks like you and I to upgrade from the 400mm f/5.6 without going all the way to $6000.


    Digiscoping (connecting the camera to a telescope) is an option for inexpensive, but manual-focus bird photography.


    If you don't already have a 50D, you might consider using some of that $2,000 budget to upgrade, because the increased pixel density is like a 1.2X teleconverter (compared to a 10 MP APS-C camera), but unlike real teleconverters, it has no optical aberrations.

  3. #3
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    Re: Longer and slower, or shorter and faster?



    For bird photography you can NEVER have enough focal length, get the LONGEST lens that you CAN afford!

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