![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
After years of dreaming and lusting, I finally have a quality camera, a
Sony A700. Bought the body only, but my brother has loaned me several lenses until I can get my own. My overall interests are scenery and closeup (flowers, insects, etc). But I'm also quite interested in taking great photos of airplanes, static and in the air. I don't have a lot of money to blow on fancy lenses. And boy in looking around, cameras are like a Bridgeport mill. Machine itself may not be cheap, but tooling up to make it useful is where the money really is... But this group inspires me, and so I thought I'd inquire here. So looking for recommendations on some good basic lenses. Zooms are a given, but also quite open to fixed focal. And, any sites to recommend with tips on getting good aviation shots? Looking forward to finally taking shots worthy of sharing here. Thank you, Jon |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Jon Anderson" wrote in message ... After years of dreaming and lusting, I finally have a quality camera, a Sony A700. Bought the body only, but my brother has loaned me several lenses until I can get my own. My overall interests are scenery and closeup (flowers, insects, etc). But I'm also quite interested in taking great photos of airplanes, static and in the air. I don't have a lot of money to blow on fancy lenses. And boy in looking around, cameras are like a Bridgeport mill. Machine itself may not be cheap, but tooling up to make it useful is where the money really is... But this group inspires me, and so I thought I'd inquire here. So looking for recommendations on some good basic lenses. Zooms are a given, but also quite open to fixed focal. And, any sites to recommend with tips on getting good aviation shots? Looking forward to finally taking shots worthy of sharing here. Thank you, Jon Congrats on the new camera. To deal with the range of photography that you are contemplating, I doubt that a single lens would be fully satisfactory. For flying aircraft you will want a zoom lens that goes at least to 200 or 300mm, Fixed aperture would be much more $$$ than variable aperture, but the latter would be OK provided that there is a reasonable amount of light. For close ups of flowers and insects, you would ideally have a macro lens of about 90mm focal length. A zoom lens would produce fairly good images provided that the lens can can focus from a close enough distance. For landscapes you will need 18mm focal length, or less. I recommend that you check out the forums at dpreview.com for lots of advice on lenses and photo techniques. Cheers, Indrek Aavisto -- Criticism is easy; achievement is difficult W.S. Churchill |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hello,
Jon Anderson a écrit : After years of dreaming and lusting, I finally have a quality camera, a Sony A700. .... So looking for recommendations on some good basic lenses. Zooms are a given, but also quite open to fixed focal. And, any sites to recommend with tips on getting good aviation shots? Looking forward to finally taking shots worthy of sharing here. As I know nothing about Sony cameras, I'll speak only of focal length, not of the quality of the lenses which I have never used. But let's see at your need closer. What you want is spotting outside fences (in flight), attending to airshows (in flight, rolling, static), visiting museums (static)... The A700 has a x1.5 factor : a 100 mm focal long lens, fitted on a A700 body, will give you pictures as if they were taken with 150mm lens on argentic films. Sony cameras may be fitted with non-Sony lenses (Tamron, Minolta...) which are sometimes cheaper. For taxiing a/c, something like a Tamron 55-200 would be ok. For fly past, you may need someting like 300 or 400mm. They have a 28-300, Sigma has a 70-300. Image stabilisation is interesting at these lenths... Next steps are 400 and 500mm, but the price is "longer" too :s That's for the focal. Hope you'll find information about quality/price. Bye, -- D52D520 Light aviation : http://tagazous.free.fr Roundels of the World : http://cocardes.monde.online.fr/v2html/en/accueil.html Delta Reflex ! http://bdd.deltareflex.com |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 22 May 2011 09:59:12 -0800, Jon Anderson wrote:
I don't have a lot of money to blow on fancy lenses. A good camera needs a good lens. This is absolute. Many people, after sinking a lot of money into a good SLR body, will become reluctant to invest further in good lenses. Instead, they may become tempted by the cheaper models offered by third-party vendors such as Tamron and others. These third-party models are not worth the price. Buy only from the same manufacturer that builds the camera. If you can only afford a single lens, make it a zoom. However, zoom lenses are the most difficult lenses to make in high quality. Every zoom lens is destined to be inferior to a fixed focal length counterpart, and this is especially true for zoom lenses that attempt to cover a very long range (e.g. 20-200mm). Zoom lenses that cover a shorter range can be made in higher quality, and I would suggest acquiring a zoom lenses for wide angle and another zoom for telephoto. For aircraft photography, a zoom in the range of 70-200mm can be obtained in high quality. For other subjects, a range of 20-60mm would also be recommended. Close up photography can be done with some zoom lenses but the best solution would be a dedicated fixed focal length macro lens. You should maybe begin with a high quality 70-200mm zoom and as the years go by you can acquire other lenses later. Unless you have lots of money, I would avoid fixed focal length lenses. They may be superior in optics but zooms are far more convenient. Rule #1: Avoid third-party suppliers (especially their zoom lenses). Rule #2: Avoid extreme-range zoom lenses that promise to do it all for you. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 5/22/2011 9:23 PM, Chris Richardson wrote:
Rule #2: Avoid extreme-range zoom lenses that promise to do it all for you. I don't know, my Canon 100mm-400mm USM IS L does a tolerable job. -- Dale G Elhardt Cypress Ca I welcome change. But I prefer bills. http://www.jetphotos.net/showphotos.php?userid=7702 |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks for the inputs. I currently have:
Minolta 35-105 f3.5-4.5 ProSpec 28-70 f3.5-4.5 ProSpec 75-300 f4.5-5.6 He's now given them to me officially, which takes some pressure off replacing them and returning them to him. So looks like a 70-200 something in a quality lens would probably be the first one to buy, and that's helpful. Generally, looking at airshow type shots, both static displays and flybys. Here at the Grass Valley airport, one cannot get too close to the runway along which most flybys occur, but one can get fairly close to the taxiway. And in the static displays, close enough to touch for the most part. I do understand the cost/quality issue. It's not that I am a cheap tightwad, but probably not going to be buying $1000 lenses anytime soon unless I find a screaming deal on a CZ 16-35... I'm moving to Australia next year and struggling to come up with the $20k it'll take to move my machine shop and pay immigration fees. But stuff like this is cheaper to buy and have shipped here, so want to get a good basic kit together before I move. Jon |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 23 May 2011 15:57:48 -0700, the Legend of LAX wrote:
I don't know, my Canon 100mm-400mm USM IS L does a tolerable job. 100-400mm is not an extreme range. By extreme range I am referring to zoom lenses that attempt to capture both the wide angle and the telephoto focal lengths, e.g. 24-200mm. (I assume that 35-50mm is the dividing point between wide angle and telephoto.) 100-400mm is within the telephoto focal lengths and so the design of this lens is not that difficult (comparatively speaking.) But any serious consumer should always check the MTF data for the lens in question. Most manufacturers provide this data somewhere, but independent MTF test data is the best. Buying a lens is always something of a gamble. The on-line reviews are not at all reliable, and any model of lens will exhibit variation due to differences in manufacturing. Even MTF can be unreliable because some MTF data is based on simulation rather than actual testing. I hate to sound pessimistic. I suppose that unless one is obsessed with quality most high-end lenses will do a good job. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 22 May 2011 22:21:08 +0200, D. St-Sanvain
wrote: Hello, Jon Anderson a écrit : After years of dreaming and lusting, I finally have a quality camera, a Sony A700. ... So looking for recommendations on some good basic lenses. Zooms are a given, but also quite open to fixed focal. And, any sites to recommend with tips on getting good aviation shots? Looking forward to finally taking shots worthy of sharing here. As I know nothing about Sony cameras, I'll speak only of focal length, not of the quality of the lenses which I have never used. But let's see at your need closer. What you want is spotting outside fences (in flight), attending to airshows (in flight, rolling, static), visiting museums (static)... The A700 has a x1.5 factor : a 100 mm focal long lens, fitted on a A700 body, will give you pictures as if they were taken with 150mm lens on argentic films. Sony cameras may be fitted with non-Sony lenses (Tamron, Minolta...) which are sometimes cheaper. For taxiing a/c, something like a Tamron 55-200 would be ok. For fly past, you may need someting like 300 or 400mm. They have a 28-300, Sigma has a 70-300. Image stabilisation is interesting at these lenths... Nice thing bout Sony (and the Minolta DNA they contain) is that the camera body has image stabilization built in. Any lens attached then becomes stabilized by default. Next steps are 400 and 500mm, but the price is "longer" too :s Rob a bank and go for the Sigma 50~500 "Bigma" super zoom. I love mine and get very good results; the zoom range makes it useful for almost any airshow situation beyond closely packed static displays. Hefty *******, though - you'll need a strong arm... That's for the focal. Hope you'll find information about quality/price. Second that. Looks like you are already getting good info from the great folks here. Bob ^,,^ |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "the Legend of LAX" wrote in message ... On 5/22/2011 9:23 PM, Chris Richardson wrote: Rule #2: Avoid extreme-range zoom lenses that promise to do it all for you. I don't know, my Canon 100mm-400mm USM IS L does a tolerable job. -- Dale G Elhardt Cypress Ca I welcome change. But I prefer bills. http://www.jetphotos.net/showphotos.php?userid=7702 No argument about great picture quality. There may be an issue with the price of such a lens, however. I just checked on Amazon and the Canon EF 100-400mm f4.5-5.6L IS USM is quoted at $1,649 down from a list price of $2,700 WOW!!!! Cheers, Indrek Aavisto -- Criticism is easy; achievement is difficult W.S. Churchill |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 5/24/2011 7:34 AM, Indrek wrote:
"the Legend of LAX" wrote in message ... On 5/22/2011 9:23 PM, Chris Richardson wrote: Rule #2: Avoid extreme-range zoom lenses that promise to do it all for you. I don't know, my Canon 100mm-400mm USM IS L does a tolerable job. -- Dale G Elhardt Cypress Ca I welcome change. But I prefer bills. http://www.jetphotos.net/showphotos.php?userid=7702 No argument about great picture quality. There may be an issue with the price of such a lens, however. I just checked on Amazon and the Canon EF 100-400mm f4.5-5.6L IS USM is quoted at $1,649 down from a list price of $2,700 WOW!!!! Cheers, Indrek Aavisto That's about right. I paid about $1400 for it a few years (holy cow! has it been seven years already?) ago from B&H. -- Dale G Elhardt Cypress Ca I welcome change. But I prefer bills. http://www.jetphotos.net/showphotos.php?userid=7702 |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Camera mounts for small digital camera | kestrel254 | Soaring | 5 | August 19th 08 04:03 PM |
Good airshow lens? | Peter.D.Evans | Aviation Photos | 27 | October 30th 07 01:08 AM |
right place, wrong lens.... | Tom Callahan | Aviation Photos | 1 | May 2nd 07 01:27 AM |
Contact lens and medical | Andrew Sarangan | Piloting | 37 | December 17th 06 10:25 PM |
Aviation Through A Lens Part 2 | Jay Beckman | Piloting | 6 | January 19th 06 03:26 PM |