I was thinking maybe Canon could update the 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6 DO IS USM. Or has Canon given up on Diffractive Optics and the "Green Ring" line? Let's hear your thoughts.
Lord_Malone Cream of the Manpanties........ Inventor Great POTN Photo Book 7,686 posts Likes: 1 Joined Oct 2005 More info | Sep 27, 2007 22:36 | #1 I was thinking maybe Canon could update the 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6 DO IS USM. Or has Canon given up on Diffractive Optics and the "Green Ring" line? Let's hear your thoughts. ~Spaceships Don't Come Equipped With Rear View Mirrors~
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RonaldS.Jr. Prodigal "Brick" Layer More info | Sep 27, 2007 22:40 | #2 I'd go for a 100-300 f/4 DO IS. That'd be cool. Mac users swear by their computers. PC users swear at theirs.
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mbellot "My dog ate my title" 3,365 posts Likes: 20 Joined Jul 2005 Location: The Miami of Canada - Chicago! More info | How about a 1200/4 IS DO?
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angryhampster "Got a thick monopod?" 3,860 posts Likes: 3 Joined May 2006 Location: Iowa More info | Sep 27, 2007 22:48 | #4 Ronald S. Jr. wrote in post #4022901 I'd go for a 100-300 f/4 DO IS. That'd be cool.
Steve Lexa
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forno Goldmember 1,177 posts Joined Apr 2007 Location: Melbourne, Australia More info | Sep 27, 2007 22:49 | #5 $$$$$$$$$$$$ Canon 350D -EF-S 10-22 l EF-S 17-55 l EF 50 f/1.8 l EF 70-200 2.8 IS l 430EX l
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jdizzle Darth Noink 69,419 posts Likes: 65 Joined Aug 2006 Location: Harvesting Nano crystals More info | Sep 27, 2007 23:01 | #6 I would like to see an improvement in the DO line but, all in all, you'd be going the L route anyway. I think Ron's suggestion of a 100-300 f/4 IS would be a good idea too.
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Wilt Reader's Digest Condensed version of War and Peace [POTN Vol 1] More info | Sep 27, 2007 23:05 | #7 Canon started with the DO as a means of achieving certain optical goals in a more compact and lighter weight...a good travel lens. The world discovered that proper handling of the DO from an optical perspective required somewhat different techniques, and the world seemed to be more enamored of L lens speed and performance, size and weight be damned. The time seems wrong for DO. Back 20+ years ago, when the world was enamored of smaller and lighter film SLRs (the Olympus OM craze, followed by the Canon AE-1 and Nikon Fm are examples) I think the DO would have wowed the world and been more of a commercial success. Now all the pixel peepers and lovers of huge 'professional looking' dSLR with battery grips (the 1Ds wannbes) make a smaller, lighter, lower performing lens something with few homes. You need to give me OK to edit your image and repost! Keep POTN alive and well with member support https://photography-on-the.net/forum/donate.php
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CyberDyneSystems Admin (type T-2000) More info | Sep 27, 2007 23:12 | #8 When a $1K lens @ f/5.6 has better IQ than a $5k Lens @ f/4... and weighs in at less than 1/3rd the $5K lens.. GEAR LIST
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Lightstream Yoda 14,915 posts Likes: 1 Joined Feb 2006 Location: Cult of the Full Frame More info | Sep 27, 2007 23:12 | #9 Wilt wrote in post #4023030 Canon started with the DO as a means of achieving certain optical goals in a more compact and lighter weight...a good travel lens. The world discovered that proper handling of the DO from an optical perspective required somewhat different techniques, and the world seemed to be more enamored of L lens speed and performance, size and weight be damned. The time seems wrong for DO. Back 20+ years ago, when the world was enamored of smaller and lighter film SLRs (the Olympus OM craze, followed by the Canon AE-1 and Nikon Fm are examples) I think the DO would have wowed the world and been more of a commercial success. Now all the pixel peepers and lovers of huge 'professional looking' dSLR with battery grips (the 1Ds wannbes) make a smaller, lighter, lower performing lens something with few homes. Some good points here. I notice a lot of people who use the grips secretly wish their DSLR looked bigger (even if they don't admit it or find another (valid) reason to justify the grips.) Note I'm not bashing the grip, but be honest with yourself about why you really want it.
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edrader "I am not the final word" More info | Sep 27, 2007 23:19 | #10 Lightstream wrote in post #4023067 Some good points here. I notice a lot of people who use the grips secretly wish their DSLR looked bigger (even if they don't admit it or find another (valid) reason to justify the grips.) Note I'm not bashing the grip, but be honest with yourself about why you really want it. Also, pricing. The 70-300 DO was a fine lens, and its lunch got eaten by the 70-300 IS refractive at half the price. Sure the traditional lens was a little longer, focused a little slower, wasn't built like a tank, but it was half the price and that is still a lot of money. $400 still buys quite a lot of goodies even in this day and age! Then the 400 DO, which YES, I HAVE shot in person, and yes, I have been impressed. But if I am going to carry that much weight, I might as well go straight to the 300/2.8 which is more versatile and is a surefire winner as well as Canon's gold standard for AF performance. I like the DO and the concept, I really do. I just wish Canon would bring out a DO offering that is compelling in its own right. I am not a tech-for-tech's-sake kind of guy. so do i....i just don't like the IQ http://instagram.com/edraderphotography/
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wimg Cream of the Crop 6,982 posts Likes: 209 Joined Jan 2007 Location: Netherlands, EU More info | Sep 28, 2007 04:05 | #11 Lightstream wrote in post #4023067 Some good points here. I notice a lot of people who use the grips secretly wish their DSLR looked bigger (even if they don't admit it or find another (valid) reason to justify the grips.) Note I'm not bashing the grip, but be honest with yourself about why you really want it. Even so, rather harsh statement. Do you have any facts to substantiate this with? EOS R & EOS 5 (analog) with a gaggle of primes & 3 zooms, OM-D E-M1 Mk II & Pen-F with 10 primes, 6 zooms, 3 Metabones adapters/speedboosters, and an accessory plague
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mcmadkat Goldmember 1,059 posts Joined Apr 2007 Location: Scotland More info | Sep 28, 2007 07:21 | #12 On my 350D I can only get 2 fingers without grip. With grip I can get 3 on it. I see that as a fair reason to get one.
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TomW Canon Fanosapien 12,749 posts Likes: 30 Joined Feb 2003 Location: Chattanooga, Tennessee More info | Sep 28, 2007 07:59 | #13 Lightstream wrote in post #4023067 Also, pricing. The 70-300 DO was a fine lens, and its lunch got eaten by the 70-300 IS refractive at half the price. Sure the traditional lens was a little longer, focused a little slower, wasn't built like a tank, but it was half the price and that is still a lot of money. $400 still buys quite a lot of goodies even in this day and age! Yes, the price is what hurts the 70-300 DO - well that and it isn't quite as sharp as it could be. Well, sharpness isn't the problem so much as contrast and flare resistance. I wish that the new 70-300 IS had come with true ring-type USM. That would make it an exceptional travel lens, and possibly a sports lens for those situations where a big lens would be obtrusive. Then the 400 DO, which YES, I HAVE shot in person, and yes, I have been impressed. But if I am going to carry that much weight, I might as well go straight to the 300/2.8 which is more versatile and is a surefire winner as well as Canon's gold standard for AF performance. I like the DO and the concept, I really do. I just wish Canon would bring out a DO offering that is compelling in its own right. I am not a tech-for-tech's-sake kind of guy. I haven't tried the 400/4 DO but with having a 300/2.8 and 1.4X teleconverter, I see no need for it. Tom
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dputz Member 189 posts Likes: 1 Joined Sep 2006 Location: Shippensburg, PA More info | The 400 DO is still considerably lighter, even with the 1.4x TC. But for the price difference and overall flexibility that the 300 2.8+1.4x TC have...it's a no-brainer. Now, if there was a 300 2.8 DO that was 3 pounds...then it might be different. --Dan Putz - The Slate
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mrfourcows Goldmember 2,108 posts Likes: 1 Joined May 2006 Location: london More info | Sep 28, 2007 08:23 | #15 me was also looking at picking up a 70-300 DO IS a month ago.. ended up buying the 70-300 IS instead. i guess the better optics and price did the trick.
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