A little preface: I am just starting out with Nikon dslr, coming from Canon. With my d7200, I'm looking for something like my canon 70-210 f4, sharp, fast enough for the indoor pool that my kids compete at, and at ~500g light enough to be carried all day (it's no good if you always leave it at home b/c it's too heavy to be lugged around). When I scour the Nikon lineup, I found nothing that would fit the bill: the af nikon 70-210 f4 is no good by most reviews, the af 80-200 and the 70-200 f4 are easily 300g more (please jump in and correct me everyone
)
Through Bjorn's lens reviews, I found the 75-150 and the 70-210 e series and they look like they would fit my requirements so I began to scour ebay. When an excellent condition 75-150 popped up for $65, what is there to wait for?
If it doesn't work out, I'll make a mug out of it
The lens was supposed to come next Wednesday according to the listing but when I got home yesterday, there it was waiting for me. Holy smoke batman!! Excited didn't even begin to describe it... Even though I had lunch at 11 and was starved when I got home, I didn't have dinner until almost 9.
This is a later generation version with the chrome ring. The lens is known to have zoom creep but for my lens, it got .. lens diarrhea ?? Tilting in any direction and Newton and his apple would come into play. Since I'm no Rick Haw and just happened to have an inch of electrical tape around, the lens was cure in no time flat. Now, pointing it straight down and the lens will still stay while remaining silky smooth to zoom. The only thing I need to remember is not to leave the lens baking in the sun or things could get ugly
The runs aside, the optics looks flawless. Pop it on, select non-cpu lens, focal length (fl) 105mm, max ap. 3.5 and off I went. A few shots, checked the exif to see what the camera saw and everything is good, fl is always 105, aperture is whatever I dialed in. Checked for general focusing problem by going wide open and pick a flower to focus on. Without pixel peeping, everything looked clear at wide open (and I mean everything corner to corner). Life was good.
As I just started on Nikon (the body was delivered a week and a half ago though I researched and read the whole d7200 manual long before that
), I only have the kit lens 18-140 to compare it to (well, I do have a 35-70 3.5-4.5 from the old n2020 but the two lens have only 1 fl point in common so it is kinda of silly to test).
Long ago, I decided that shooting charts and brick walls are not for me (they are not my normal subjects
ok, neither are license plates but they are a whole lot easier targets). To compare lenses, I would pick a point that can be reached by the lens in questions, walk around the neighborhood and shoot license plates (our plates here are black lettering on glowy white--lots of CA potentials). With the D7200, this is even easier as I "measured" the same distance by filling up the Nikon focusing rectangle with the license plate, moving the focus square from center, to left center, then right center. To check for the lens for its true performance, I would do the test with a tripod (btw, I generally don't do tripod, only using them for family group pics; hate carrying any extra weights as I have enough carrying my own
Since I shot license plates and want to maintain the good grace of my neighbors, I will refrain from uploading any of those pics here
My results seem to indicate that my copy of the 75-150 is better optically than my copy of the 18-140. Some of the 18-140 pics might look better but that were due to better color and contrast, and I wasn't worrying about that. The test was how well the plate numbers look and the 75-150 wins out.
Unfortunately this is where the story turns sour. I took the camera off the tripod and repeat the tests. After all, this is how I normally shoot, with no tripod. The 75 would be my hand held telephoto. The result: though the 75 won out on the shorter end, the 18-140 wins out at 100mm and above. I repeat the tests with better techniques for the 75 (bracing the elbows against the body, "control your breathing grasshopper" .. for those who missed this point, google "Kung fu, David Carridine"
) and the 18-140 with its VR still wins unless I was leaning on a tree or a mailbox to shoot
Acknowledging defeat, I walked around the neighborhood, re-learning manual focusing, finding my limits with this lens. Ended up taking the camera + lens to work this morning as well, taking pictures on the way in. Only stopped when the battery is practically gone (no more display but still taking shots
) 400+ pics in all, mostly test shots from last night though.
Things I learned:
- the focusing dot for this lens is not accurate and will need to be calibrated
- focusing, though much more accurate, with live view is not the way to go; it exacerbates the hand shaking problem and messes up the composition.. royally. I guess I can always edit and crop but I hate doing that
- under 100mm, I am pretty good, over 100mm, the usable range of shutter speed and iso couldn't help. better find something to brace against (maybe a string monopod is in order ?? )
- outdoor, in good light, this lens kicks butts
- indoor, with normal lighting or worse, like the cruise that we will take in early August, better bring the 18-140 instead
- manual focusing is actually fun; it makes me think about each shot, where to place the focus point, what do I want to emphasize....
- the d7200 doesn't do wi-fi when battery is below 20%
- the battery might rated for 1100 shots, but not when you are always checking the display, using live view )
and lastly,
- photography is fun .. .again
some pics tomorrow as I left my card reader at home (in the canon bag
) and like I said above, the camera doesn't do wi-fi when battery is low