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Tamron16-300mm F/3.5-6.3 Di II VC PZD MACRO LENS | Rate Topic |
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Posted by amazing50: Thu Jan 22nd, 2015 22:03 | 1st Post |
FedEx dropped of a Tamron16-300mm F/3.5-6.3 Di II VC PZD MACRO LENS for Nikon DX cameras earlier today. One week shipping time from Japan to Ontario from a seller named t-dimension3. This will be my travel lens on a D5300, comming very soon. Tried a small mirrorless and it's OK but I have big hands;~)and love long zooms. The shot posted was taken hand held, out my front door, at both ends of the zoom. Attachment: Tamron16-300mm domo shot cr.jpg (Downloaded 63 times)
____________________ There is nothing worse than a sharp image of a fuzzy concept ;~) Mike Grace |
Posted by jk: Fri Jan 23rd, 2015 03:33 | 2nd Post |
Useful range of lens especially for a DX camera but optically zooms with such a long range usually suffer badly with distortions. It will never be a bad lens or a great lens but it will always be a very useful lens especially as it has macro as well.
____________________ Still learning after all these years! https://nikondslr.uk/gallery_view.php?user=2&folderid=none |
Posted by amazing50: Fri Jan 23rd, 2015 19:19 | 3rd Post |
For a lot of my travel shooting I like a wide view followed be one or more detailed closeups and a lot of distortions don't realy show that much. If it needs correcting there are various programs to do the adjusting. Attachment: Image00001.jpg (Downloaded 57 times)
____________________ There is nothing worse than a sharp image of a fuzzy concept ;~) Mike Grace |
Posted by jk: Sat Jan 24th, 2015 04:04 | 4th Post |
The distortion is usually at the wide end, at the long end the images arent as crisp as a prime. That said as a travel lens you are compromising ultra-quality for convenience. I prefer the convenience when I am travelling.
____________________ Still learning after all these years! https://nikondslr.uk/gallery_view.php?user=2&folderid=none |
Posted by amazing50: Sun Jan 25th, 2015 21:27 | 5th Post |
The D5300 arrived Friday from Japan. No complaints.
____________________ There is nothing worse than a sharp image of a fuzzy concept ;~) Mike Grace |
Posted by highlander: Mon Mar 28th, 2016 11:51 | 6th Post |
I'm thinking about this lens and can't decide between this an Nikon's own 18-300
____________________ Blog https://blythestorm.com Website http://www.blythestormphotography.com |
Posted by Robert: Mon Mar 28th, 2016 12:46 | 7th Post |
Just checked out the Dpreview review of this lens and they report issues regarding image sharpness under some circumstances might pay to take a look at this link. http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikon-af-s-18-300mm-3p5-5p6-vr/3 For balance I took a look at the Tamron review too. http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/tamron-16-300mm-f-3-5-6-3-di-ii-vc-pzd-macro From what I read I would get the Tamron but further research might be worthwhile. If you get it mail order you should be able to return it if not up to snuff.
____________________ Robert. |
Posted by jk: Mon Mar 28th, 2016 15:10 | 8th Post |
highlander wrote:I'm thinking about this lens and can't decide between this an Nikon's own 18-300 Get the Nikon version it usually performs better and has a higher resale value.
____________________ Still learning after all these years! https://nikondslr.uk/gallery_view.php?user=2&folderid=none |
Posted by Eric: Tue Mar 29th, 2016 06:40 | 9th Post |
Just a personal thing, but I have never had a zoom lens with more than a 5x zoom range that didn't disappoint at some point. And there always seems to be a lot of quality variation between versions of the same lens. The sad fact is, you get what you pay for. Graham's £6000 500mm is testament to that. The problem is that unless you have lots of cash to invest in top quality glass and a regular need for heavy long lenses to justify the expenditure, you will always be faced with less than perfect lenses....whose images will need assistance in post processing. It's always going to be a question of ..."is the lens good enough for me?" Buying from somewhere that will accept returns is paramount.
____________________ Eric |
Posted by amazing50: Wed Mar 30th, 2016 06:36 | 10th Post |
Problem with returns is the high cost of postage and the time and effort to get back customs fees etc. from on line purchases.
____________________ There is nothing worse than a sharp image of a fuzzy concept ;~) Mike Grace |
Posted by Iain: Thu Mar 31st, 2016 11:03 | 11th Post |
Tamron seems to be producing some good lens at the moment, i have a few friends with newish Tamrom lensed the results from them are good.
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Posted by amazing50: Sat Apr 2nd, 2016 15:12 | 12th Post |
Just arrived yesterday, a TAMRON 90mm SP Macro Lens f/2.8 DI VC USD 1:1 for Nikon. It is FX has internal focus, very fast, and sharp on the D610. They also introduced an 85mm f/1.8 but it has no macro, for about the same price, about $600US.
____________________ There is nothing worse than a sharp image of a fuzzy concept ;~) Mike Grace |
Posted by jk: Sat Apr 2nd, 2016 18:43 | 13th Post |
amazing50 wrote: Just arrived yesterday, a TAMRON 90mm SP Macro Lens f/2.8 DI VC USD 1:1 for Nikon. Now that is a a very nice lens. I have never heard a bad report of that lens.
____________________ Still learning after all these years! https://nikondslr.uk/gallery_view.php?user=2&folderid=none |
Posted by highlander: Sun Apr 3rd, 2016 09:56 | 14th Post |
In the end I plumped for the 18-200 Tamron lens, but the latest edition which has VC. Initially I wasn't very impressed, but once you work out its limitations and work within it, it is actually not bad at all. For a penny under £170, and not having to take anything else (or worry unduly about any potential damage to it) is quite liberating. I would also say that looking less professional in some parts of the world might also have advantages, it certainly does in the UK with officious security folks.
____________________ Blog https://blythestorm.com Website http://www.blythestormphotography.com |
Posted by highlander: Sun Apr 3rd, 2016 10:01 | 15th Post |
Quite a substantial post production crop, and I'd only had the lens around an hour at the time I took the shot. (D7100 body btw) Attachment: BlytheStorm_N-0467.jpg (Downloaded 16 times)
____________________ Blog https://blythestorm.com Website http://www.blythestormphotography.com |
Posted by amazing50: Fri Apr 15th, 2016 14:55 | 16th Post |
highlander wrote:Quite a substantial post production crop, and I'd only had the lens around an hour at the time I took the shot. After one hour ?? Do you have a bird magnet in your yard?
____________________ There is nothing worse than a sharp image of a fuzzy concept ;~) Mike Grace |
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