Jim |
Should I buy an inexpensive zoom lens? 400-500mm There are a number of these lenses available on the market and on ebay. I am intrigued, but most likely wouldn't use them that often. I have a use for them. Crows. gulls, and other birds. I notice they are slow and don't have a tripod collar. What are the plus & minus's?
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Jeff S. Kennedy |
Plus - They're cheap (inexpensive) Minus - They're cheap (poor optics) Plus - They're cheap (poor optics can still be cool and maybe they're good enough) Minus - They're cheap (maybe the optics won't be good enough)
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Jim |
Thanks for responding...I have a 300mm zoom that is great by Tamron and was hoping someone could give me their experience w/one of the number of lens available. Maybe, I could pick up a recommended used one...CHEAP!
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Jon Close |
400mm, 500mm, or 600mm mirror lenses, also known as reflex, or catadioptric lenses. Pluses: Very economical, can be had new for $150 (Vivitar 500mm f/8 Reflex) to $400 (Sigma 600 f/8 Reflex). Generally quite sharp even though construction is fairly simple. Compact size and lightweight (though tripod mount is preferred to hand-holding). Minuses: Aperture is fixed, usually at f/8. Manual focus. Highlights are rendered as doughnut shapes (sometimes a distraction, sometimes an interesting feature).
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Jim |
Thanks, Jon C, The lens I have spotted are 5.6 and one 4.0, no mirrors. I think w/the replys I'll go the cheap route..if I get so I need the better so be it. Thanks again for responding. JIM
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