While on the subject, if it were you, for all things outdoors (including high school marching band) would you opt for the Canon 70-300L, 100-400II or Sigma 150-600 C (with a Canon 70D)?
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docsmith said:Whereas 18 months ago, the super telephoto zoom field was limited to expensive or older options, it is now very interesting with a number of good options. I consider the 150-600 sports to be one of those good options, especially if you want something that goes out to 600 mm.
Most of these where shot mid-day, so maybe not the most artistic of shots, but I think do illustrate what the lens can do. BTW, the GBH chick shot is a ~100% crop, the others are also heavily cropped, but not approaching 100%.
Cory said:While on the subject, if it were you, for all things outdoors (including high school marching band) would you opt for the Canon 70-300L, 100-400II or Sigma 150-600 C (with a Canon 70D)?
AlanF said:The 150-600s don't perform well at greater than 400mm on the 70D (or 7DII). The 100-400 II is excellent and is the one to go for if you need the extra length over the 300L.
Cory said:While on the subject, if it were you, for all things outdoors (including high school marching band) would you opt for the Canon 70-300L, 100-400II or Sigma 150-600 C (with a Canon 70D)?
traveller said:Anyone else think that Bryan's samples from the Sigma 150-600 C look just as good, if not better than the 150-600 S (at least up to 500mm)?![]()
AlanF said:Cory said:While on the subject, if it were you, for all things outdoors (including high school marching band) would you opt for the Canon 70-300L, 100-400II or Sigma 150-600 C (with a Canon 70D)?
The 150-600s don't perform well at greater than 400mm on the 70D (or 7DII). The 100-400 II is excellent and is the one to go for if you need the extra length over the 300L.
docsmith said:traveller said:Anyone else think that Bryan's samples from the Sigma 150-600 C look just as good, if not better than the 150-600 S (at least up to 500mm)?![]()
Yep...up to ~400 or maybe 500 mm at TDP. Lenstip show them similar at 150mm, close at 300, but the S pulling away at 450 and 600. Ephotozine shows a similar trend as well.
But, honestly, I think you buy these lenses for 500-600. Otherwise, buy the 70-300L, 100-400 II, etc.
Also, and I am watching this and want to see more before making the final conclusion, I think the "S" has better bokeh and contrast. At least in some of the images I've seen so far. Like I said, I will want to see a few more side by side comparisons before finalizing that observation.
jmeyer said:AlanF said:Cory said:While on the subject, if it were you, for all things outdoors (including high school marching band) would you opt for the Canon 70-300L, 100-400II or Sigma 150-600 C (with a Canon 70D)?
The 150-600s don't perform well at greater than 400mm on the 70D (or 7DII). The 100-400 II is excellent and is the one to go for if you need the extra length over the 300L.
It performs great on the 50D, and I just showed you examples on the first page. Not quite sure why you're pushing the 100-400 II so much. It was heavy, it's long, and it requires good light, but sharpness was on par with the 400 5.6. What more do you want from it?
traveller said:True about 500-600mm usage,, but I still don't see that much difference here. I'd like to see some real world comparison before making my final judgement. From what I've seen, the difference between the Sigma and the Tamron is quite slight, even at 600mm. The Sigma C version seems to test similar, if not a little better than the Tamron at the long end.
AlanF said:jmeyer said:AlanF said:Cory said:While on the subject, if it were you, for all things outdoors (including high school marching band) would you opt for the Canon 70-300L, 100-400II or Sigma 150-600 C (with a Canon 70D)?
The 150-600s don't perform well at greater than 400mm on the 70D (or 7DII). The 100-400 II is excellent and is the one to go for if you need the extra length over the 300L.
It performs great on the 50D, and I just showed you examples on the first page. Not quite sure why you're pushing the 100-400 II so much. It was heavy, it's long, and it requires good light, but sharpness was on par with the 400 5.6. What more do you want from it?
Here are some comparative shots from my last outing 2 or 3 weeks ago with it. A robin in the car park obliged me with a sitting target, while I was waiting for my wife. So, I decided to compare the 100-400 II on different bodies. The top is the 100-400mm II on the 7DII at 400mm f/5.6, the middle with 560 at f/8, and the bottom the 5DIII at 560mm and f/8. (These are all 100% crops, ie 1 pixel = 1 pixel of the original).
jmeyer said:AlanF said:jmeyer said:AlanF said:Cory said:While on the subject, if it were you, for all things outdoors (including high school marching band) would you opt for the Canon 70-300L, 100-400II or Sigma 150-600 C (with a Canon 70D)?
The 150-600s don't perform well at greater than 400mm on the 70D (or 7DII). The 100-400 II is excellent and is the one to go for if you need the extra length over the 300L.
It performs great on the 50D, and I just showed you examples on the first page. Not quite sure why you're pushing the 100-400 II so much. It was heavy, it's long, and it requires good light, but sharpness was on par with the 400 5.6. What more do you want from it?
Here are some comparative shots from my last outing 2 or 3 weeks ago with it. A robin in the car park obliged me with a sitting target, while I was waiting for my wife. So, I decided to compare the 100-400 II on different bodies. The top is the 100-400mm II on the 7DII at 400mm f/5.6, the middle with 560 at f/8, and the bottom the 5DIII at 560mm and f/8. (These are all 100% crops, ie 1 pixel = 1 pixel of the original).
I expect the canon lens to be very sharp and based on your pictures it is. I'm just wondering what you don't like about the sigma? You say it performs bad on the 70D and 7D II, but on my older 50D, it performed better than my expectations.
AlanF said:jmeyer said:AlanF said:jmeyer said:AlanF said:Cory said:While on the subject, if it were you, for all things outdoors (including high school marching band) would you opt for the Canon 70-300L, 100-400II or Sigma 150-600 C (with a Canon 70D)?
The 150-600s don't perform well at greater than 400mm on the 70D (or 7DII). The 100-400 II is excellent and is the one to go for if you need the extra length over the 300L.
It performs great on the 50D, and I just showed you examples on the first page. Not quite sure why you're pushing the 100-400 II so much. It was heavy, it's long, and it requires good light, but sharpness was on par with the 400 5.6. What more do you want from it?
Here are some comparative shots from my last outing 2 or 3 weeks ago with it. A robin in the car park obliged me with a sitting target, while I was waiting for my wife. So, I decided to compare the 100-400 II on different bodies. The top is the 100-400mm II on the 7DII at 400mm f/5.6, the middle with 560 at f/8, and the bottom the 5DIII at 560mm and f/8. (These are all 100% crops, ie 1 pixel = 1 pixel of the original).
I expect the canon lens to be very sharp and based on your pictures it is. I'm just wondering what you don't like about the sigma? You say it performs bad on the 70D and 7D II, but on my older 50D, it performed better than my expectations.
I haven't used the Sigma 150-600mm's. But, I have used the Tamron 150-600mm extensively on the 5DIII and the 70D. According to the www.objektivtest.se and lensfreak sites, the Tamron and the Sigmas have weak MTF performance and softness at greater than 400mm. Here is my experience using a 300mm f/2.8 II + 2xTCIII on a 5DIII (bottom) versus the Tamron 150-600mm at 428mm on a 70D (top) of a greenfinch taken from the same spot. By itself, the Tamron looks OK. But, compare it with the Canon lens on the 5DIII you can see the differennce.
AlanF said:I haven't used the Sigma 150-600mm's. But, I have used the Tamron 150-600mm extensively on the 5DIII and the 70D. According to the www.objektivtest.se and lensfreak sites, the Tamron and the Sigmas have weak MTF performance and softness at greater than 400mm. Here is my experience using a 300mm f/2.8 II + 2xTCIII on a 5DIII (bottom) versus the Tamron 150-600mm at 428mm on a 70D (top) of a greenfinch taken from the same spot. By itself, the Tamron looks OK. But, compare it with the Canon lens on the 5DIII you can see the differennce.