privatebydesign said:
D500 $2,995.95
200-500 $1,396.95
Total $4392.90
7D MkII $1,349.00
100-400 MkII $2,099.00
Total $3448.00
I doubt if those numbers are going to push Canon into doing anything. If anybody gets hung up on 500 is better than 400 then a smart salesman would sell them any of the third party 150-600's and make more commission anyway (and save them a ton on the Canon deal).
D500 costs
$1,995, not $2,995 (at least in the US), and 500mm > 400mm, and that's a big deal for the reach-obsessed.
I'm not singing the praises of the Nikon by any stretch, but Canon isn't exactly considering an inexpensive superzoom because Tamron and Sigma are making money on them. They are considering one because a first party offering from Nikon represents (to a small degree) a threat to steal an entire user group from Canon: amateur/starting wildlife and birding folks.
Presently, the D500 + 200-500 is a shade cheaper than the 7D2 + 100-400, and the Nikon folks have the bump of a new rig with fancy tech on it (better sensor, tilty-flippy, 4K, epic buffer, etc.) as the bright shiny light to draw people. Again, I'm not going out to buy one, but right now, Nikon has arrows in the quiver for this segment that Canon does not.
- A