Thanks for letting me know. I had a chance to use it for a minute. Weight was OK but the rings were a bit of a problem. Good choice with the tripod foot. I believe that it will be steadier. My 70-200 f/4L IS is also safe with no tripod ring but I occasionally grab the ring of my 300L f/4 (non-IS) which has a plate and put it on 70-200 when I intend to shoot a lot of pictures in tripod.neuroanatomist said:neuroanatomist said:tron said:As I have already mentioned I am interested in your impressions mostly regarding the opposite use of rings.
P.S It will fit nicely vertically on the bataflae 26L bag I just ordered![]()
I'll let you know on the rings - lens arrives tomorrow. TDP's specs show it as the same (retracted) length as the 24-70/2.8L II with the hood mounted, and that fits vertically in my Flipside 300 - so I assume the 70-300L will be the same.
So...I got the 70-300L on Thursday, AFMA'd it that night (a constant +2 at four focal lengths across the zoom range), and took it on an excursion Friday afternoon. The size is great - it does fit vertically in the Flipside 300, so I was able to take four lenses (and I needed all four). It also fits in a Lowepro Lens Exchange 100 AW, so that'll be nice on a belt to pair up with the 24-70 II.
I did find the reversed placement of the zoom/focus rings (relative to my other L zooms) a bit annoying. I'm sure I'll get accustomed to it, although frequently switching off with the 24-70 II will slow that process down (it would have paired well with the EF-S 17-55/2.8 when I had it).
I just ordered the Tripod Mount Ring C for it. It's a small enough lens and my RRS ballheads are robust enough that it's not really needed for balance (though it won't hurt). But I think the tripod foot will give me a good place to rest my hand, keeping it off the focus ring and positioning my fingers under the zoom ring.
The convenience of the lens and it's excellent IQ more than offset the annoyance of the ring placement, IMO.
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