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All images © Bob Atkins
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Topic: Canon 70-300 DO Lens (Read 6664 times)
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rixtix
Junior Member
Posts: 23
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I keep reading that this lens is soft at the end of the range and was wondering how soft is soft? For hundreds less is the 70-300 IS better?
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KeithB
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So, Bob, do you consider the DO lens a rare Canon failure?
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Bob Atkins
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I don't think it's a technical failure. There are quite a few people out there who have them and love them. It is a very small lens for the focal range. User reviews on Amazon give it 4.5 out of 5 stars with a lot of people giving it 5 out of 5 stars. The 400/4 DO also has a very loyal fan following and it's the smallest, lightest 400/4 lens out there (well, it's the only 400/4 lens out there, but if there was a refractive optics version it would be larger and heavier!). Diffractive optics also do an excellent job of minimizing chromatic aberration.
However I think that diffractive optics aren't something that's going to be "the next big thing". Nobody but Canon has tried to use them and Canon just have the two lenses, the 70-300DO and the 400/4 DO. Diffractive optics do enable a smaller, lighter lens to be made for any given focal length/aperture and it was an interesting technology exercise but it seems to me that the tradeoffs (cost and some optical quirks under some lighting conditions) don't really outweigh the benefits (smaller size) for most people. The 400/4 DO IS USM is $6145, which is a lot of money.
I doubt that Canon will be in a rush to bring out any additional DO lenses though. I don't think they've been a huge success from a marketing standpoint.
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rixtix
Junior Member
Posts: 23
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A third option is the excellent Tamron AF 70-300mm f/4.0-5.6 SP Di VC (see http://www.bobatkins.com/photography/reviews/tamron_70-300_vc_review.html) [/quote] I took a look at this lens on line and one thing keeps bugging me. Sometime in 1989 I was working in Los Angeles selling cameras at a fairly popular store. We got some Tamron lens in inventory for Minolta, Nikon and Canon. EOS was still only three or four models I think we were selling the 10s at the time was the hot model maybe the 620 but about one in five Tamrons came back as bad within the first two weeks (14 day return policy) and it didn't matter for which camera. Now, I am reading the reviews on Amazon and you see a few buyers with quality control issues. I bought a lot of junk in my day namely Buicks and Chryslers but at my age I a little wary of Tamron because of their history. I'm just sayin, ya know.
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Bob Atkins
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1989 was a long time ago. 23 years in fact! At that time the EOS system had only been out for less than two years, so maybe there were early problems reverse engineering the rather complex electronics that the lenses need. Canon don't provide any details of their lens to camera communications protocols to 3rd party lens makers, so it's up to them to figure it all out. Sigma had all sorts of problems in the early days which resulted in a lot of their early lenses not working at all when mounted on newer Canon bodies.
I've tested a bunch of Tamron lenses in the last 5-10 years and I've had no problems with them. In fact I own the Tamron 70-300 VC myself. If I was worried by their QC or reliability I wouldn't have bought one. Plus Tamron lenses come with a full 6 year warranty (Canon only give you a 1 year warranty), which suggests they are pretty confidant about reliability, since warranty repairs are obviously an expense for them.
I can appreciate your concern and, of course, every lens maker (including Canon, Nikon, Sony, Pentax etc.) send out a few lenses with problems, but my experience with Tamron lenses over the last few years has been quite positive. You do see complaints of course, but you see complaints about pretty much any lens. If you have 100 good ones and 1 bad one, it's the person who got the bad one who is most likely to post about it!
My advice when buying ANY lens, from a cheap 3rd party "no name" consumer zoom to Canon "L" series glass is to buy it from a reputable dealer and to test it as soon as you get it. Any reputable vendor, including Amazon, Adorama and B&H will exchange the lens within 14 days if you find it has a problem.
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« Last Edit: January 31, 2012, 11:01:38 AM by Bob Atkins »
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