Sure, I can only express what my mind thinks, every comment is subjective. In your sliding scale, going down the aperture as much as Canon went brings unsuitability in many scenarios. Value is often found mid of the way, not all the way the cheap route.Fair, but those are your ideas of value. Anyway, it's a sliding scale. Nikon and Canon 600/4 lenses are $15K, give up 1-1/3 stops for the Nikon 600/6.3 knock 70% off the price, then give up an additional 1-2/3 stops and knock 80% off that price. Nikon gives us the middle option, Canon gives us the bottom one.
Nope, no lens you mention here is good value. The Sony 14 1.8 would be.There we disagree. I was just holding the RF 14/1.4 in my hand, it's small and light and requires digital correction. I know what the Sigma 14/1.4 feels like (because it's close to the EF 11-24/4 that I owned for years) and it's a beast. No, the 14/1.4 is not cheap. Being able to easily carry a lens on a trip is a lot of BANG.
Canon chose to go the premium route with the 100-300, taking it firmly outside the amateur range. The Sony 300 2.8 is much much more approachable. In which world 6k is the comparable with 12k?! I read an article last week of someone thinking of 2 Sony 300 2.8 instead of the 400s and 600s, such is the value of that lens.Lol, yes it did and fair. But funny that you mention the Sony 300/2.8. Where are the 100(120)-300/2.8 zooms from Sony and Nikon? You seem fixated on two specific Nikon lenses and/or one specific price range. I suspect that many people willing and able to spend $4-6K on a lens could also spend $10-15K on a lens.
Going back to the original point: many just wish Canon would give more choice in more balanced price ranges, because they love many things Canon is now offering and Canon themselves put on themselves the role of sole lens provider for the system.
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