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brainiac wrote:
epuja wrote:
xrayvision wrote:
Unfortunately the Nikon 14 - 24mm f2.8 beats all lenses Canon offer at 14mm and 24mm in image quality even when shot wide open.
thats an interesting comment, quite humorous though. i would tend to agree on the 14mm end, although the 14L II is a fine lens.
IMO the 14L2 has a couple of advantages over the Nikkor at 14mm. It is _very_ rectilinear which is a very welcome quality in a lens this wide. The NIkkor has quite strong distortion at 14mm. Also the 14L2 is compatible with the Canon 5D2 without a lens adaptor. If you want to put a camera with that kind of image quality on the 14-24 you need to shell out for a D3x. There are many ways in which EOS compatibility is still a valuable feature.
At 24mm the Nikkor may not be better than the new 24 L's for image quality, and while it competes on versatility and price, it can neither shift, nor open up to f1.4. It really doesn't make much sense to worry about the infinitessimal differences in performance of these 4 superb lenses when each one of them has very different strengths and applications.
While the Nikkor is a superb all-rounder, the question is how many photographers can afford to buy or carry all three of the Canon's? And does that matter when most photographers specialise in specific areas of photography? And if you're looking for a general use UWA, can you put up with the totally inadequate 16-35L2 and 17-40L? Currently the 24L f1.4 and 17-40 are the lenses for my kind of work, and Nikon can't match either of those lenses at any price. I would not prefer a 14-24 over a 17-40 because I depend on the 40mm end. The Nikkor 14-24 is big, heavy and vulnerable and the Nikkor 17-35 is quite distorted at the 35mm end. Today, Canon's excellent wideangle offerings are a reason for switching. To Canon.
i completely agree with what u have said..they are my thoughts exactly. On a Canon camera, I would not recommended using the 14-24 with an adapter, considering Canon's own lineup of wide primes leaves little to be desired..
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