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Archive 2019 · Official: Canon EOS-1D X Mark III

  
 
arbitrage
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p.21 #1 · Official: Canon EOS-1D X Mark III


RobertLynn wrote:
I am interested in this camera but it will necessitate me upgrading and updating a few other things. I'll need to upgrade from LR5 to whatever the current is. I'll likely update my PS at that point as well. I'm still shooting 1DXs so I'm using CF, not CFast or whatever the other new stuff is. Double whammy. I'll likely need two readers too because when I'm in the field, I take a reader with me, and doing my baseball work- being able to turn files over immediately is critical.

The good news is, my 1DXs have 70kish on each and
...Show more

Well at least you will have saved yourself from investing in CFast that was in the 1DXII and is now basically going obsolete. CFast was the most expensive memory to buy and only recently has seen big discounts (for obvious reasons). The 1DXIII will use CFExpress that are just hitting the market this month. CFExpress are expensive also (not nearly as expensive as what CFast used to be) but I have a feeling you will at least get a free card with the body if you buy in the early months (as Canon did for the 1DXII). The good thing is CFExpress is being adopted by a lot of manufacturers (13+ have announced they are making cards) so prices will likely go lower with all that competition. Also it seems like a card that many cameras will be using in the future so should hopefully have a much longer life than C-Fast did.



Dec 21, 2019 at 09:40 AM
RexGig0
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p.21 #2 · Official: Canon EOS-1D X Mark III


Lan11 wrote:
Even a bigger downer are the lenses. After introduction of an excellent 400/4 II DO and promises of more to come, nothing happened. The 300 and 400 mm lenses haven’t been updated for the past 26 years. Meanwhile Nikon, a relative newcomer to the DO technology, offered recently 3 new lenses.


Have you seen the weight specifications for the 400/2.8L III and 600/4L III? Weight saving was a compelling feature of the 400 DO lenses, but Canon has made some very low-weight 400/2.8 and 600/4 Mark III lenses. DO technology does not produce the out-of-focus backgrounds that some shooters crave, so Canon may have decided to make very light-weight lenses, that also produce desirable out-of-focus highlights, without incorporating DO technology. Yes, Nikon has been busy, with super-tele lenses, but Canon has hit back, hard.

The EF 300/2.8L II IS was more than just an Image Stabilization upgrade. The elements/groups formula changed, the MFD got nicely closer, and the MM was notably improved, along with a weight reduction. I still love my pre-II, but the II is on my long-term shopping list. Notably, Nikon’s 300/2.8G VR II is not a new design, is heavier, and has worse balance, than either original or II Canon EF 300/2.8L IS lenses.

I recently handled a pre-owned EF 400/2.8L III, at a local pro-oriented camera store, and started crunching numbers, to see if I could hope to afford it. It was like handling a well-balanced EF 300/2.8L II lens. (No, the number-crunching did not work in my favor. I may add a 2x Extender III, this month, or early in January, to try on my pre-II EF 300/2.8L IS.)

For what it is worth, I had a conversation with an employee of a major dealer of both Canon and Nikon products. He said that there are fewer returns, for malfunctions and defects, with Canon telephoto lenses, than Nikon.

From my pojnt-of-view, the only downer, with Canon lenses, is that my wife is an avid Nikon shooter, and it makes more financial sense, and more luggage-toting sense, to mostly have large telephoto lenses for one system, which is why I bought a D5 in early 2018. The lens I bought, instead of the above-mentioned pre-owned EF 400/2.8L III, was a Nikkor 500/4E FL, also pre-owned, at the same store. (Yes, of course, the Nikkor 500/4E has proven to be a true gem, so well-balanced, and very little heavier than a 300/2.8G VR II.) In the future, the longest Canon white tele prime I can, likely, justify acquiring is a pre-owned EF 300/2.8L II IS.



Dec 23, 2019 at 02:39 PM
Ischgl99
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p.21 #3 · Official: Canon EOS-1D X Mark III




RexGig0 wrote:
Have you seen the weight specifications for the 400/2.8L III and 600/4L III? Weight saving was a compelling feature of the 400 DO lenses, but Canon has made some very low-weight 400/2.8 and 600/4 Mark III lenses. DO technology does not produce the out-of-focus backgrounds that some shooters crave, so Canon may have decided to make very light-weight lenses, that also produce desirable out-of-focus highlights, without incorporating DO technology. Yes, Nikon has been busy, with super-tele lenses, but Canon has hit back, hard.

The EF 300/2.8L II IS was more than just an Image Stabilization upgrade. The elements/groups formula changed, the
...Show more

I would love to get a 400/2.8 III, it would serve multiple purposes, field sports as well as wildlife with extenders. I can’t afford one yet, but it is at the top of my wish list. Some users here have reported this lens works perfectly with extenders, so buying this version would actually save me money by not having to buy a sports lens and a wildlife lens. I just need to get enough business that needs this lens to satisfy the tightwad side of me.

I have a 300/2.8 IS and love that lens, but it doesn’t work that well with the 2x extender. Perched birds are ok, but BIF has been an exercise in frustration. The version II reportedly works much better. A friend of mine just bought a v2 and am going to try it at some point, but when I do I have a feeling I will be listing my lens shortly afterwards!



Dec 23, 2019 at 10:50 PM
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