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Paul Yi wrote:
Is it worth $450?
I've tried Apo 180/3.4, and liked its resolution, especially at the infinity.
I'm curious as to how 180/2.8 pre-apo performs compared to EF200/2.8L II or 70-200/2.8L at 180mm...
Thats a good question... There are a lot of clever shooters on this forum that experiment with all kinds of lenses. For different reasons...
I might be in the minority here but for me the whole "alt glass" thing is about the middle to super-wide range of lenses: from 85mm down to 14mm etc. I have the Canon 100/2, 70-200/2.8 L and the 400/2.8 L and really feel no need to replace them. The performance, auto focus, auto aperture, metering and stability of these lenses are great. OK, not everyone has a need for a fast 400, but the other two lenses are affordable and easy to find. Do I want another 180mm lens that would require an adapter, possible surgery, stop down metering and manual focus? Not really, but I have the telephoto range covered with Canon glass. If I did not own Canon glass would I go with different "alt" lenses? Probably not. I think modern telephotos and long zoom lenses is one of the areas that Canon does really well.
I am a recent fan of "alt" lenses though. The thing that started me down this road was the question: "are there interesting choices or alternatives to the Canon lenses in the 50mm and wide angle arena?" When push comes to shove I have never been super thrilled with the Canon wide lenses. The asking price for a fast Canon 50mm is a negative as well. Lenses like the 58mm Rokkor and the 50mm Takumar are fun but real working additions to my kit.
Its interesting to watch folks adapt a manual focus telephoto to a modern DLSR. Consider the 300, 400, 500 FD lenses. Are there any reasons to go through the hassle of adapting these lenses and deal with the limitations (like manual focus etc) other than PRICE? Do you get better photos with the 300 FD than you do with the EF version? As a photojournalist and former sports shooter I have used a lot of long lenses over the years and find that you can't go wrong with the long Canon EF glass. I am sure dedicated Nikon shooters will feel the same way about the Nikor glass as well. I don't do much long lens work these days but I have shot NFL football, MLB baseball, US Open tennis, PGA golf, polo, racing, high school sports etc, etc. I have shot with manual 300/2.8's and manual 400/2.8's and the auto focus counterparts and IMHO the auto focus and auto aperture feature is a HUGE plus...
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