Okay, I have just taken delivery of the Nikkor 300mm f/4E PF ED VR this last Friday, and will now offer my opinions
Let me qualify my preferences by stating I am a
hiking-photographer (not a hide- or blind-photographer, who remains in one place). I hike, and am perpetually-mobile, and I capture the wildlife that I see as I do so. In other words, I seldom hike 'to a destination,' to photograph 'there'; I have
no destination ... other than to capture what I see as I progress.
I am not trying to be an 'artist,' either; I simply enjoy the thrill, and the unknown, of the anticipation of nature's randomness, and I try to capture authentic,
in-situ, images of the wildlife I encounter.
That said, as a background, when I shot Canon, my mainstay lens was their 180mm f/3.5 Macro. When I switched to Nikon, my preferred lens became the Sigma 180mm f/2.8 APO Macro, which is a terrific lens. After reading posts about the Voigtländer 125 f/2.5 APO Macro, I sold my Sigma and utilized the CV 125 for awhile, but quickly realized I need AF for wildlife—and the limitations of the CV's reach, plus its 620° focus throw, were
not meant for impromptu photography, but planned, methodical photography, particularly nature stacks.
While I love (and still do love) the CV 125, I purchased the Nikkor 300mm f/2.8G ED VR II as my primary tool to have 'at-the-ready,' and have been lugging this barbell around for nearly 2 years. The quality of the lens is Otus-like, but its
weight [6.39 lb (2.90 kg), being particularly front-heavy] has removed a certain amount of joy from my hiking ever since.
My other lenses were never a burden ... but this lens certainly was. [FYI, I bought (and sold) the terrific Zeiss 135mm f/2 APO,
twice, for the same reason:
terrific, super-sharp lens ... but
too heavy to carry with 4 other lenses in a pouch.]
Yes, the 300mm VR II is
3x as heavy as the Zeiss,
but it is also 10x as useful for wildlife photography, with even better-quality single images, and so I dealt with it for a long time. Further, I wasn't carrying my 300mm f/2.8 VR II 'in a pouch,' but as
my primary lens mounted on a tripod, slung over my shoulder.
However, after about a year of lugging this damned thing around, I had been looking for a way to justify dumping my 300mm f/2.8G ED VR II, for almost another year, just to lighten my load, seeking an easier-to-carry alternative with
more mobility. After rubbing my chin on the
Nikkor 300mm f/4E PF ED for a long time ... I finally took the plunge
First, let me state, no, it is not as good as my 300mm f/2.8 VR II ... but it is close enough!
What this lens *IS*, however, is
a delight to carry and it certainly delivers
images that will please all who view them, except perhaps the most fastidious of curmudgeons
As proof for this, below are some images I took on my first day's trial. The reader needs to keep in mind three very important things: 1) these are
not 'staged, stacked shots,' composed with all the time in the world to execute; 2) these are
live, impromptu shots, taken on the go, and with but a fleeting moment to capture them ... before the moment was lost. Finally, 3) they were all
hand-held;
I left my tripod at home for the first time in years. That said, take a look:
Western Bluebird (
Sialia mexicana) [
D500 +
300mm f/4E PF +
1.4 TCE III = ~630mm |
1/1600 |
f/5.6 |
ISO 1250] - 40% cropped-in
Anna's Hummingbird (
Calypte anna) [
D500 +
300mm f/4E PF +
1.4 TCE III = ~630mm |
1/1600 |
f/5.6 |
ISO 1250] - 5% cropped-in
Anna's Hummingbird (
Calypte anna) [
D500 +
300mm f/4E PF +
1.4 TCE III = ~630mm |
1/1600 |
f/5.6 |
ISO 1250] - 15% cropped-in
Ruby-Crowned Kinglet (
Regulus calendula) [
D500 +
300mm f/4E PF +
1.4 TCE III = ~630mm |
1/1600 |
f/5.6 |
ISO 1250] - 10% cropped-in
Lesser Goldfinch (
Spinus psaltria) [
D500 +
300mm f/4E PF +
1.4 TCE III = ~630mm |
1/1600 |
f/5.6 |
ISO 1250] - 15% cropped-in
I am very pleased with these results, even knowing my 300 VR II would have perhaps rendered them a bit better. They're
good enough!
For the first time since dumping the former, and using the latter, I left a barbell + a tripod at home, and just carried this lens on the chest-slot of my
Cotton Carrier.
To be able to walk, hands-free, but be immediately ready for 'whatever nature may throw' was a breath of fresh air! I even tried this lens as a macro equivalent:
Unknown Flower (
Mom's garden) [
D500 +
300mm f/4E PF +
1.4 TCE III = ~630mm |
1/320 |
f/6.3 |
ISO 640] - No Crop
Again, this is a
single image,
hand-held (
no stack,
no crop). To be able to stand back 4.5 ft. (1.4 meters), with a ~630mm lens, hand-held, and fill the frame with an image like this, is to take live macro shooting to another level. I am positive this lens, if used with a tripod,
plus the D850's ability to internal-stack, will produce some incredible results of authentic floral wildlife.
So that is my initial impression:
I am absolutely thrilled ...
THIS is the hiking lens I have always wanted ...
super-light,
super-versatile,
super-capable I will post more photos as time progresses ...
In the meantime, feel free to post your own, or ask/offer any questions/suggestions.
Thanks for reading