Moderately priced 2 lens set
/forum/topic/511173/0

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Doyle Carter
Registered: Dec 29, 2006
Total Posts: 7
Country: United States

How would you rate this two lens set to cover a range of 17-300?

Sigma 17-70 f/2.8-4.5 DC Macro $389 at B&H

Canon 70-300 f/4-5.6 EF IS USM $550 at B&H

Kenko 1.4 Pro 300 DG Teleconverter $195 at B&H

I have a Canon Rebel XT with the 17-55 kit lens and the cheap Canon 75-300.

I assume that both of these lens would be an improvement over what I have. I want the teleconverter to extend my 300 to 420.

Thanks for your comments.




chiliman
Registered: Aug 07, 2005
Total Posts: 275
Country: United States

Before everyone jumps in trying to tout their favorite lenses, let me suggest you might give a few more specifics about what exactly you're trying to achieve with the upgrade. Because you already have the range covered... what do you shoot? In what way(s) have you found your current lenses to be inadequate? What do you want the new ones to do that your old ones can't (or don't do as well)?

Andrew



Mark Eley
Registered: Sep 27, 2006
Total Posts: 482
Country: United Kingdom

Whenever anyone mentions cheap and IQ in the same sentence the Tamrons come into the equation

I would consider the 17-50 Tamron and use legs to cover the gap between 50-70mm

My personal choices would be the Tamron 17-50 and a S/H sigma 70-200 2.8, but from what I have heard here the Canon 70-200 F4 also comes highly recommended in the place of the Sigma unless you abslutely "have" to have the 300mm Focal length.



Patrick Cox
Registered: Mar 28, 2004
Total Posts: 3368
Country: United States

Doyle Carter wrote:
Kenko 1.4 Pro 300 DG Teleconverter $195 at B&H...

I have a Canon Rebel XT with the 17-55 kit lens and the cheap Canon 75-300.

I want the teleconverter to extend my 300 to 420.

Thanks for your comments.



I don't believe the Kenko "Pro" will allow autofocus on your XT. You will need the cheaper version that does not report is presence to the camera.



mrladewig
Registered: Dec 20, 2005
Total Posts: 2588
Country: United States

I'm not sure autofocus will work with the teleconverter either.

I have the 70-300 IS you've asked about and it has produced some nice images for me and the IS works very well to improve the usability of the lens. The reviews that I've read have consistenetly shown that it produces better images than the 75-300 series of lenses. My images have been consistantantly better than 75-300 samples I've seen in the past and are better than my old 80-200 Pentax consumer lens ever produced.

I've read consistently good reviews of the Sigma 17-70 2.8-4. Tamron has stolen a bit of the spotlight with their 17-50 2.8, but the 17-70 sample shots I've seen have had good color, contrast and sharpness. I'd probably try each out and see what works best for you if you can find them locally.

I wouldn't say that the focal lengths need to match up though. In my kit I have lenses that overlap signifcantly and places where there are gaps. Well, I don't really have any gaps if I carry all my lenses, but I often leave some of my lenses at home when I backpack or travel. Say I've got a gap from 50 to 70mm. I can usually address the distance to subject to resolve any composition issues in this range. It isn't a common landscape photography range on a crop camera (where framing sometimes can't be changed by moving).



Stuart Bell
Registered: Feb 11, 2005
Total Posts: 754
Country: United Kingdom

Kenko Pro doesn't report, so should be no problem.

Predictably. I'll add a vote for the Tamron 17-50/2.8.

No experience with budget tele-zooms, so I'll pass on that one!

Stuart



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