justaCanonuser
Grab your camera, go out and shoot!
I have one and do use it as a birder (this lens is made for birders and maybe some sports shooters). I realized that I frequently use it in the 400-600mm range, not always at 800mm. So far no issues with sharpness in real world photography, even @ 800mm.Sidenote2, I was happy to see the new 200-800 from an innovation point of view, but at the same time I'm pretty disappointed as well. Somebody who is buying such an expensive super telephoto lens capable of 800mm is most probably going to be a wildlife photographer/birder and you can be sure the lens will mostly be used on the long end. It's absolutely unnecessary to sacrifice IQ (or anything) in order to produce such wide zoom range. A 400-800/8 would have been an instant buy even despite having the 100-500. Now couldn't care less.
Coming from tele photography mostly with a prime (my standard combo: an EF 500mm + 1.4x TC = 700mm) I am positively surprised by the sharpness of this zoom even at the long focal length end (again: I don't talk about MTF charts, since they just tell the theoretical limit of a lens, if you do have a well adjusted copy - Nikon lenses often suffered from decentered lenses at least in the past decade). In particular with a crop camera like my R7 I also appreciate for the first time in my life that I am able to zoom in when I do need 800mm. At that huge focal length, it's not so easy to hit a tiny object with such a small angle of view in the EVF. The only drawback of that lens is f=8 to 9 in the mostly used focal length range, so freezing faster movements requires a lot of light. Slowly moving birds in the morning or evening are no problem because of Canon's very good IS.
But it is clear that such a quite exotic lens always has to be a compromise. The good thing is that a birder/wildlife photographer get's a relatively lightweight, compact and flexible zoom lens for such a big focal length. For all other users I think that lens makes no sense.
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