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Topic: Long Range Lens Options (Read 7088 times)
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numbutt1
Newbie
Posts: 3
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Hello All! Im trying to get some condensed input on what are the best options for a Longer range lens. I just got a EOS T3i that came with the 18-55mm lens. Im heading to Yellowstone in a couple weeks and want something to get out there but am getting bogged down with everything I read online, just too much to process in a short amount of time. Do you guys got some suggestions for a Newb? I would mostly be shooting scenery and wildlife but dont know what the best combo is lens, lens+ converter, etc etc. What brands work with what. will auotfocus and IS still work. keeping in mind Im completely green to this and want to stay under $1000 can a few of you guys give some advice? Thanks much
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marcfs
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70-200 f/4 L IS is a great longer lens. If you think you are serious about photography this is a lens that deserves serious consideration. It is very sharp, has great image stabilization and its light weight. This is a lens you will not outgrow. Price at B&H is $1,299.
Good luck!!
Marc
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numbutt1
Newbie
Posts: 3
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So this kinda goes back to my original question. Will all these things work together? Tamron 70-300 plus a 1.4x??? And what brands will intermix. I know its not the way one should learn etc etc but I am wanting to get some shots of animals in the open that there really is no getting much closer then 50-75yrds. So I read an review here on the canon 300 with 1.4x that looked promising? Im not opposed to buying used stuff either. The guy at the store suggested the 70-200 as well I just dont see it getting out there very far...?
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KeithB
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I use a Tamron 1.4x on my canon 70-300 with good results. Bob did a test and found that the 70-300 + 1.4x was no better than just cropping the 70-300 image alone, but YMMV. With the number of Mega pixels you have, you can crop quite a bit and still have a high resolution image. 50-75 yards is no sweat for the 70-300, which in your case is the equivalent of a 480 mm lens on a Full Frame (35 mm) camera.
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numbutt1
Newbie
Posts: 3
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what about the Tamron 75-300 4/5.6 ? They seem to be inexpensive Im guessing not as good of quality as 70-300?
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KeithB
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what about the Tamron 75-300 4/5.6 ? They seem to be inexpensive Im guessing not as good of quality as 70-300?
I don't know about the quality, but the 75-300 lacks "VC" or vibration control (Image Stabilization in Canon-speak) which IMHO is required for a long telephoto when handheld.
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