Tokina AT-X 16-28mm F2.8 vs. Canon EF 17-40mm F4

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Jun 25, 2012
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I'm thinking about purchasing either one of these lenses. I have read reviews on both, and both have their advantages and disadvantages. I also did a search on this forum for information, but I am just seeing if anything has changed regarding the Tokina and if more people are using it now.

Does anyone have any experience or recommendations with purchasing either one of these lenses?
 
R1-7D said:
Does anyone have any experience or recommendations with purchasing either one of these lenses?

Well, w/o any information about what you plan to shoot this is a little fuzzy - but I'm a happy new 17-40L owner, it is sturdy/sealed, inexpensive (for a L lens), has a wide zoom range vs. changing lenses and has good performance if stopping down.

I wouldn't buy the Tokina because it doesn't take simple protection/polarizer/nd screw-in filters, the 77mm 17-40L can even be fitted with 82mm filters with a stop-up adapter since the Canon lens caps I own are designed to take 1 step larger filters (67->77 & 77->82).
 
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I'd be using the lens for landscapes and architecture.

I have filters on all my lenses currently, but I'm not opposed to the bulbous front end of the Tokina. I'm very careful and I am sure I can make do without a filter.

Thanks for your reply.

The thing that is so tempting about the 17-40mm is that, as you have pointed out, it is quite cheap for an L lens. I can buy a good used copy and invest the rest of the money saved into something else I like. The Tokina is about $200-300 more expensive.
 
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R1-7D said:
The thing that is so tempting about the 17-40mm is that, as you have pointed out, it is quite cheap for an L lens. I can buy a good used copy and invest the rest of the money saved into something else I like.

My thought exactly - though I ended up buying a new 17-40L because the used ones were too expensive (€600 new, €500 used) and this lens line is known to contain duds with decentering and other issues, I had to exchange my first copy.
 
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R1-7D said:
I'd be using the lens for landscapes and architecture.

I have filters on all my lenses currently, but I'm not opposed to the bulbous front end of the Tokina. I'm very careful and I am sure I can make do without a filter.

Thanks for your reply.

The thing that is so tempting about the 17-40mm is that, as you have pointed out, it is quite cheap for an L lens. I can buy a good used copy and invest the rest of the money saved into something else I like. The Tokina is about $200-300 more expensive.

I think that would be the most important consideration for me. If it were not for the bulbous front element, I'd be the proud owner of the Tokina today. I didn't love the sharpness of the 17-40 and sold it- on the other hand the Tokina was very good.
 
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Well I purchased the Tokina This afternoon. I've only shot around the house so far, but I'm really enjoying it. I'm going out with a friend in about an hour to take some shots of the industrial part of town. I'll report back. So far it seems like a pretty nice Lens though.
 
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sagittariansrock said:
R1-7D said:
I'd be using the lens for landscapes and architecture.

I have filters on all my lenses currently, but I'm not opposed to the bulbous front end of the Tokina. I'm very careful and I am sure I can make do without a filter.

Thanks for your reply.

The thing that is so tempting about the 17-40mm is that, as you have pointed out, it is quite cheap for an L lens. I can buy a good used copy and invest the rest of the money saved into something else I like. The Tokina is about $200-300 more expensive.

I think that would be the most important consideration for me. If it were not for the bulbous front element, I'd be the proud owner of the Tokina today. I didn't love the sharpness of the 17-40 and sold it- on the other hand the Tokina was very good.

There are filters for Tokina. See here:

http://www.dpreview.com/news/2012/12/06/Fotodiox-launches-WonderPana-Filter-Systems-145-66
 
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Thanks for the information on the filters, John. I will look into this further.

I took the lens out yesterday night. Unfortunately I only got 28 shots off with my 5D2 before getting kicked out by the police of the railway yard I was near. :( Oh well...I'll try to take a few more pictures tonight. I had quite a slow shutter speed last night and did notice quite a bit of flare...but it was an unusual looking flare and it kind of added a cool effect to the pictures.
 
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John Thomas said:

Ugh, not exactly inconspicuous or easy to transport :-o

R1-7D said:
and did notice quite a bit of flare...

Flare control is an issue with uwa lenses since you are bound to have light sources in the frame, the aps-c flavors differ quite significantly, too ... let us know your findings, personally I'm happy my 17-40L is said to be rather flare resistant. Btw: Removing flare is hard to impossible, but if you want to add cool looking flares, there are multiple nice photoshop plugins out there :-o
 
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I have the Tokina. Fast & sharp. Really sharp. Big & heavy too and will flare just a bit if the light source catches from the side. Highly recommended for landscapes and really shines on low light interiors. Don't underestimate the weight, on a 5D3 it's quite a neckfull.
 
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Marsu42 said:
the 77mm 17-40L can even be fitted with 82mm filters with a stop-up adapter since the Canon lens caps I own are designed to take 1 step larger filters (67->77 & 77->82).

Really?

you learn something every day, i'm gonna check mine out.
I wonder if my 82mm filters will fit inside my 70-200 hood :-\
 
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wickidwombat said:
Marsu42 said:
the 77mm 17-40L can even be fitted with 82mm filters with a stop-up adapter since the Canon lens caps I own are designed to take 1 step larger filters (67->77 & 77->82).
Really?

I can really say it for the 17-40L (I currently use it with a 82mm clear filter) and the 70-300L (even takes 82mm on top of a 67 mm filter). But when using a step-up you cannot remove the hood anymore and, screw on the filter from the front...
 
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Definitely good information. I didn't know this either.

Marsu42 said:
wickidwombat said:
Marsu42 said:
the 77mm 17-40L can even be fitted with 82mm filters with a stop-up adapter since the Canon lens caps I own are designed to take 1 step larger filters (67->77 & 77->82).
Really?

I can really say it for the 17-40L (I currently use it with a 82mm clear filter) and the 70-300L (even takes 82mm on top of a 67 mm filter). But when using a step-up you cannot remove the hood anymore and, screw on the filter from the front...
 
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SwampYankee said:
I have the Tokina. Fast & sharp. Really sharp. Big & heavy too and will flare just a bit if the light source catches from the side. Highly recommended for landscapes and really shines on low light interiors. Don't underestimate the weight, on a 5D3 it's quite a neckfull.

+1

Also the distortions are much less than Canon's 17-40 & Canon 16-35L. OTOH, Tokina flares more. Oh well... you cannot have everything. But in my experience, I stick mostly with Tokina these days. Better image quality overall. (Sharper & less distortions, as I said)
 
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Tokina is the one third party lens that I'd buy. They are well built and reliable. However, I got a 20% off deal on a new Canon 16-35mmL last year, and bought it.

I find that ultra wide lenses are not my thing though, so I may sell it for a 24-70mm MK II instead, I still have my old Tokina 17mm f/3.5 Prime for the few times I need really wide shots, and I also have a 15mm FE which also seldom gets used.
 
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