gtjohnson Offline Upload & Sell: Off
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p.1 #11 · New glass or Mk2n (from 40d)? | |
Thank you for all the responses.
I think timbop's idea was to get MkII performance without the extra for an N and spend the savings in glass which makes perfect sense if I'm on a restricted budget (which I am, of course). It's a bang-for-the-buck approach and a darn good one. I think, however, that there is a component to my situation which I didn't clearly explain. I am happy with the 100-400 for daytime shooting. While it doesn't give me the bokeh that a 2.8 lens gives, I get great reach and the flexiblility of the zoom is a big benefit. Shooting at night, however, I'm limited to the 70-200 which is my only 2.8 lens. Given that the MkII is only a 1.3 crop, my 200mm (=320mm w/ 40d) - already short for field sports - becomes even shorter (=260mm). An f/4 lens doesn't give me the speed I need to shoot under the lights. I can effectively create close to that with the 1.4 extender on my 70-200 (280mm f/4).
I guess, as I explore this a little more in depth, my question is - given the better focusing ability of the MkII, does it more than make up for the fact that I'll be shooting with a shorter reach (effectively) and will miss the ability to take shots that are now too far away and would require more cropping on a sensor that already has less resolution than the 40d? Seems freaklikeme and Gil_W addressed this directly above and both feel the answer is in favor of glass over new body. Others seem intent on moving me to a 1-series body as a foundation and building from there.
jcolwell - you've already made the move from 30d to MkII (assuming you kept the same lenses). Was it worth the move? Can you expand on your findings and how they relate to my concerns?
Gary
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