Tamron EF 24-70 f/2.8 VC in Stock & Quick MTF Review

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AJ said:
More samples here
http://www.fredmiranda.com/forum/topic/1108651
Looks like it's sharp, very effective VC, good AF, decent bokeh, hefty vignetting.
Thanks for the site. Looks good but yeah, that vignetting is massive. This looks like a great lens on a cropped body and a good lens for the FF users. Of course, since Canon won't make a similar lens with IS, it looks like the choice is between vignetting and IS. I think I would prefer IS since lighroom traditionally does a decent job getting rid of vignetting
 
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dswatson83 said:
AJ said:
More samples here
http://www.fredmiranda.com/forum/topic/1108651
Looks like it's sharp, very effective VC, good AF, decent bokeh, hefty vignetting.
Thanks for the site. Looks good but yeah, that vignetting is massive. This looks like a great lens on a cropped body and a good lens for the FF users. Of course, since Canon won't make a similar lens with IS, it looks like the choice is between vignetting and IS. I think I would prefer IS since lighroom traditionally does a decent job getting rid of vignetting
Learned something here. I haven't thought about rid of vignetting by software.
 
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cliffwang said:
Learned something here. I haven't thought about rid of vignetting by software.

Nowadays, vignetting, distortion and even chromatic aberrations (LR 4.1 rc2 just improved the latter even more) are not an issue anymore because they are easily corrected. The real quality markers of a digital lens are sharpness & color rendition and next to that build quality, af & image stabilization.
 
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"ISO 12233 resolution chart results have been added to the Tamron 24-70mm f/2.8 Di VC USD Lens Review page.
[...]
Before making your purchase decision, I encourage you to wait for me to spend more time evaluating the Tamron 24-70mm f/2.8 Di VC USD Lens' AF performance. Neither of the two lenses I have autofocus accurately on the test chart using a Canon-calibrated EOS 1Ds Mark III. I will minimally test the second lens behind a second calibrated 1Ds III and a 5D III."


http://www.the-digital-picture.com/News/News-Post.aspx?News=2357

The corners do not look good at all... Even if it is a bad copy issue, two out of two is not very encouraging... ::) Let's hope it performs better on the other bodies on which it is going to be tested...

Cheers!
 
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well_dunno said:
"ISO 12233 resolution chart results have been added to the Tamron 24-70mm f/2.8 Di VC USD Lens Review page.
[...]
Before making your purchase decision, I encourage you to wait for me to spend more time evaluating the Tamron 24-70mm f/2.8 Di VC USD Lens' AF performance. Neither of the two lenses I have autofocus accurately on the test chart using a Canon-calibrated EOS 1Ds Mark III. I will minimally test the second lens behind a second calibrated 1Ds III and a 5D III."


http://www.the-digital-picture.com/News/News-Post.aspx?News=2357

The corners do not look good at all... Even if it is a bad copy issue, two out of two is not very encouraging... ::) Let's hope it performs better on the other bodies on which it is going to be tested...

Cheers!

Many if not most of his Tamron lens reviews involve him sending back a copy or two. I had high hopes for this lens but I was holding out for that exact review and I am not surprised at the outcome.
Because of my personal experience with the only Tamron lens I own(18-270) and after finding that site some time ago, I never purchase a lens without first studying those ISO 12233 image crops. I, like most people, do not have the equipment needed to do that type of testing. Therefore I won't take the gamble of buying anymore third party lenses and hoping that I get a good copy.
 
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So does this guy get paid by Canon to review pictures?
Or receiver sponsorship from Canon?
Free services from Canon?

The reason that I ask is that the above comments are pretty damning about his understanding of what it means for a lens and camera body to be accurately aligned.

I've had my Canon cameras calibrated by Canon (a service for which I paid for) and I still needed to use AFMA with any Canon lens that I hadn't sent to Canon for simultaneous calibration. So just because a lens has the word "Canon" on it means nothing with respect to its ability to accurately autofocus.

If the above tester doesn't use or understand why AFMA is appropriate and how to use it then you should take that as an indication that the reviewer is not very sophisticated and doesn't know what they are doing.
After simple search on the site;
http://www.the-digital-picture.com/Photography-Tips/AF-Microadjustment-Tips.aspx


Another simple search reveals exactly how he conducts these tests.
http://www.the-digital-picture.com/Help/ISO-12233.aspx
 
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SR20DEN said:
Another simple search reveals exactly how he conducts these tests.
http://www.the-digital-picture.com/Help/ISO-12233.aspx

And yet he returned a sigma 85mm lens on the grounds that it (consistently) front focused. Curiously, the Canon lenses he reviews seldom if ever need micro adjustment.

The test charts are useful, and the Canon lens reviews are useful, but the reviewer does seem to have a lot of trouble with third party lenses (more than other reviewers). I would not put much weight on tdp's reviews for third party lenses.
 
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He doesn't seem to have much trouble with Zeiss lenses. And, I am not saying you didn't, but for example if you compare the charts of the Tamron 24-70 f/2.8 to the Canon, you'll notice that in the center at f/2.8, the Tamron is actually sharper than the Canon. The problem I see on those charts is that all lenses suffer more on the outsides. The evidence condemns many Canon lenses as well. So I don't get the impression that he seems to care who made each lens. One more point, he does not only test Canon gear. There are plenty of Nikon lens tests on that site.
 
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SR20DEN said:
He doesn't seem to have much trouble with Zeiss lenses.

He doesn't have trouble with the autofocus on Zeiss lenses because those lenses don't autofocus.

And, I am not saying you didn't, but for example if you compare the charts of the Tamron 24-70 f/2.8 to the Canon, you'll notice that in the center at f/2.8, the Tamron is actually sharper than the Canon. The problem I see on those charts is that all lenses suffer more on the outsides. The evidence condemns many Canon lenses as well.

His test chart shots are just fine, I don't have any issues with these.

Its the review comments that seem somewhat colored. It seems that every time he reviews a third party lens, he is on a mission to plant seeds of doubt in the potential buyers mind. He has persistent problems with third party lenses but not Canon lenses. For example, photozone claim to have gone through 4 copies of the Canon 24-70mm, whereas tdp's review for that lens reads like a marketing brochure.
 
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elusive1 said:
1) Nikon D800 is better than the 5D3 in almost all aspects, even video.
2) Very overpriced Canon Cinema division got destroyed at NAB by Black Magic and Sony who stole all the buzz.
3) Now Tamron fills the I.S. niche that #1 feature in the 24-70 that Canon customers were begging and pleading for, but Canon failed to deliver.

1) That's an opinion, there are plenty of people that prefer the 5DIII.
2) The Black Magic camera is very cool, but geared more towards consumers. The Cinema EOS cameras are for the film industry. See how many Hollywood productions end up using the BM camera, I'm sure it won't be many. 2.4x crop is a joke (I know it's useful in some applications, but obviously you can't shoot everything on it).
3) I'll agree with you on this one, but the 24-70 II really hasn't been tested yet. I don't think IS is very essential in that range. You'd think that no one had ever taken a good picture with a 28-70 or the current 24-70 the way some people cry about IS, people have done just fine without it.

You say "non-Canon fanboys" prefer the D800, which is pretty much saying "Nikon fanboys prefer the D800." You can claim these products as failures all you want, but I guarantee you all of them will sell well within their respective markets. The 5DIII has been selling like crazy, if it was that bad of a camera no one would buy it. The D800 is a great camera, but the MP count makes it seem better than it really is.
 
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elflord said:
He has persistent problems with third party lenses but not Canon lenses.

I certainly didn't read all reviews there, but they got a second sample of the 70-300L - you can see them in the iso test charts, and the first one was certainly bad. And this did make me doubt if buying this Canon lens is too large a gamble in comparison a 3rd party 70-300.
 
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Axilrod said:
elusive1 said:
...
3) I'll agree with you on this one, but the 24-70 II really hasn't been tested yet. I don't think IS is very essential in that range. You'd think that no one had ever taken a good picture with a 28-70 or the current 24-70 the way some people cry about IS, people have done just fine without it.

...

Well, I would say that's very important. A 24-70 lens at F/2.8 is distinctive (IMHO) in indoors, spaces with low-light. Otherwise one would go for 24-105 f/4 which is the kit lens for 5D. A cheaper lens with a bigger zoom range.

But in low/dim light situations is important to have a lens which is capable to shot sharp images at (at least) 0.5 x Focal Distance, which (at least) at 70 mm and taking in account that we have a max aperture of 2.8 one can find enough situations in the day-by-day photo reportage.

I think that there will be many cases in which one would stop down the aperture at (let's say) 3.2 to achieve the best sharpness and try to keep the ISO's noise under control. Hence, having shutter speeds at 15 - 30 can be quite normal and so, IS is quite important imho.

Of course, I don't say that a 24-70 f/2.8 without IS is garbage (as we all know, the version I sells/sold pretty well) but I simply cannot image how Canon will justify the almost $1000 difference when they will not provide IS while Tammy has one along with a quite decent optics. Perhaps someone can enlighten me?

Just my2c
 
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John Thomas said:
Perhaps someone can enlighten me?

CR's take on the 24-70ii was that Canon had several prototypes, but the one(s) with IS were too heavy or the iq tradeoff was to large to get the weight down. And Canon simply sells stuff for as much money as they can get away with - and they should since I cannot afford it anyhow, better release the "good" stuff at a reasonable price and sell the "stellar" stuff at a premium. For a pro who's in business 1000$ is not a lot of money for better results, and nothing compared to the cost of good tele lenses. When did anyone complain about the price of the 70-200?
 
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Marsu42 said:
John Thomas said:
Perhaps someone can enlighten me?

CR's take on the 24-70ii was that Canon had several prototypes, but the one(s) with IS were too heavy or the iq tradeoff was to large to get the weight down. And Canon simply sells stuff for as much money as they can get away with - and they should since I cannot afford it anyhow, better release the "good" stuff at a reasonable price and sell the "stellar" stuff at a premium. For a pro who's in business 1000$ is not a lot of money for better results, and nothing compared to the cost of good tele lenses. When did anyone complain about the price of the 70-200?

Yeah, I'm aware about Canon's strategy. Thanks a lot, anyway. But now the things are changed. And are changed in a significant matter, imho. There IS a viable alternative at a much lower price.

And not a viable alternative (imho) but one which has an important feature which Canon didn't manage to make it - so the price difference doesn't justify. Not the price alone.

See, in the case of of 70-200 (esp. in the case of 70-200 II) there aren't other alternatives which can compete with much success (ok, Sigma perhaps). And hence Canon can settle for a price which market can bear. The same is in the case of, for example, L 8-15 fisheye. It is worth $1400? But since Tammy's & Sigma offerings cannot compete optically and feature wise (or, better to say that the others' offerings are nonexistent), Canon has that price.

But in the case of newly released Tammy's 24-70 VC the things are different. I think that the price / performance ratio is in favor of Tamron by a wide margin, even compared with Canon's 24-70 II if the Canon will keep the same price.

0.02c++ & HTH,

John Th.
 
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John Thomas said:
But in the case of newly released Tammy's 24-70 VC the things are different. I think that the price / performance ratio is in favor of Tamron by a wide margin, even compared with Canon's 24-70 II if the Canon will keep the same price.

Looking at the "onion" bokeh, while it might not matter for a lot of shots, it could ruin them when overlapping and pp is difficult. Someone who sells his/her pictures might think it's worth the $1000 price difference, because this is not the difference between a good shot and a very good shot, but between nothing and very good.

And concerning "is it worth it", there's also the serious amateur to consider who reached his personal ceiling and thinks that the real thing that's been missing from his shots for all this time is this "tack sharp" 24-70ii lens. I read an economy article about the real price of ice cream the other day, and you might have guessed it: If people want ice cream, they're going to pay about anything to get one if they want it, so prices will still rise :-)
 
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Hi, maybe there are not many photogs like me but coming from a crop body with the EF-S 17-55 IS as standard lens I'd like to have something similar on a FF body, too. The EF 24-105 has a nice range but the f4.0 is unacceptable. So I'll propably go for the Tamron. If I look for a stellar perfomance or best low light use, I use a good prime lens. Such a zoom is just a walk- around lens and the f2.8 alone limits its use. But with the Tamron you can at least shout at 70mm with as little as 1/15s which means usable 3 stops light less than with the Canon when it's critical not to raise the ISO value.
 
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RobertG. said:
The EF 24-105 has a nice range but the f4.0 is unacceptable. So I'll propably go for the Tamron. [...] But with the Tamron you can at least shout at 70mm with as little as 1/15s which means usable 3 stops light less than with the Canon when it's critical not to raise the ISO value.

Looking at your lens arsenal, I don't think you're a typical case of Canon customer - but your requirement for a walk-around 2.8 with IS does make sense of course. For the rest of us, while the Tamron really could be just a sturdier, water-resistant 17-55 equivalent, it's seems to be a good primary lens, too.

I'm actually considering it as a 17-55 alternative because the Tamron can be used both on crop and ff (yes, all ef lenses can, but with the Tamron it does make sense because less vignetting on crop and still sharp). And the Tamron lens seems to be predestined for 1.4x tc use if a quick zoom range extension is needed and f4 doesn't hurt.
 
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John Thomas said:
Of course, I don't say that a 24-70 f/2.8 without IS is garbage (as we all know, the version I sells/sold pretty well) but I simply cannot image how Canon will justify the almost $1000 difference when they will not provide IS while Tammy has one along with a quite decent optics. Perhaps someone can enlighten me?

Canon probably don't want to put IS on if it requires any compromises in optical performance. The photographers who are going to buy this lens are mostly pros who bring along whatever accessories are needed to get the correct exposure (tripods if they want long exposures, flashes if they want shorter exposures than available light affords). There aren't on the other hand accessories that improve optical performance of a poor performing lens (though again an accessory that lets you stop down like a tripod or a flash is the next best thing!)

There are few real world scenarios where a 1/15s exposure is optimal. It might just happen to be the right exposure for a particular landscape scene, but that landscape photographer is prepared to expose for as long as necessary, so he usually has a tripod. For photographing people, that exposure is just too slow.

So I guess the answer to the question is, Canon's strategy for this lens will be to market it as the standard zoom with the best optics. It is priced accordingly. They are counting on their target market not caring too much about IS. They do also have good offerings for users who want a "convenience zoom" (24-105IS) and an "available light lens" (primes)
 
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