What would you buy with my $1,000?
My budget is $1,000. I'm not ready to upgrade my Nikon D40 just yet. I want to spend the money on a lens suitable for minor league/high school, side line sports where I am not allowed on the field with the dim lights and a 10 foot high fence is sometimes an obsticle. I'm not sure if I want a lens like the delicious Nikon 70-200mm f/2.8 *but* if I'm going to invest, should I go all the way with such a lens or stay around 100mm f/2-ish, give or take some? Would you invest in just onelens or 2 different ones? How would you spend the $1,000?
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I love my Siggy, it's treated me very well! For anyone looking at a 70-200 f/2.8 on a budget, look no further than Sigma's offering.
Good luck, because a body upgrade from the D40 will also be a welcome change, along with some nice glass! The D40 is a nice camera, but after a few sport shoots, you wish you had a nicer body, or at least a good grip for it!
Best of luck,
Nick
Sigma 18-50 f/2.8, 70-200 f/2.8
Nikkor 55-200mm f/4-5.6, 50mm f/1.8
Next question ... I've read the forums on Tamron 70-200mm f/2.8 & now I'm mixed up on which seems to be better then the other. I love AF when the the moment allows so reading a couple of reviews on how Tamron is AF slow is a huge negative. Ever experience this with Sigma or Tamron?
I own a Tamron 70-300mm f/3.5 manual - it's not one of my favorites. Think I might attempt to sell, get what I can and place towards that Sigma.
www.zebleys.com
http://zebleysphotography.smugmug.com
Troy, MI
D700/200, SB800(4), 70-200, 300 2.8 and a few more
www.sportsshooter.com/tjk60
Otherwise, a 70-200 f/2.8 would be the next best choice in my opinion. Get close and shoot through the fence.
Most fields I shoot on at night (baseball and football) require ISO 3200, f/2.8 and 1/400 - 1/500 sec.
Here's a several examples of the lens (120-300) and light conditions.
Good luck in your search.
Mike
All pics shot at ISO 3200, f/2.8 with a Canon 20D and Sigma 120-300 f/2.8
Long Ball shot at 120mm
This was shot through the green backstop at 221mm.
Runner coming to third shot at 300mm
My Portfolio
MaxPreps Profile
Canon EOS 1D MK III and 7d; Canon 100 f/2.0; Canon 17-40 f/4; Canon 24-70 f/2.8; Canon 70-200 f/2.8L IS; Canon 300 f/2.8L IS; Canon 1.4x and Sigma 2x; Sigma EF 500 DG Super and Canon 580 EX II.
I LOVE my f2.8 70-200mm Sigma. I use it on a OLY 510. Pretty nice setup with out the high cost.
<a href="http://s86.photobucket.com/albums/k85/b08rsa/?action=view¤t=NewVienna7_27_08009.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="http://i86.photobucket.com/albums/k85/b08rsa/NewVienna7_27_08009.jpg" border="0" alt="Photobucket"></a>
I'm far from being a pro but my first choice would be:
Nikon 70-200 Vr ( out of your 1K range)
Nikon 80-200 AFS (may be able to get one used)(heard its really heavy)(will AF focus with the D40)
Heard alot of good with the New Sigma 70-200 (money left over)
Tamron 70-200 (new version) (money left over) I have this one, it is super sharp at all points, but does wonder on focus a bit, especially in poorer light conditions. But I would not get ride of it, the price was great.
I would suggest you take your body (D40) over to a place where you can try them, or even rent one for a week and test them yourself.
It's not what you look at that matters: Its what you see!
Nikon
http://www.time2smile.smugmug.com
It's not what you look at that matters: Its what you see!
Nikon
http://www.time2smile.smugmug.com
Yep, well worth consideration. I have one and enjoy using it. It only starts to show its shortcomings when it gets really dark. As long as there's reasonable light, it does well.
Nikon D300, 18-135/3.5-5.6, 70-300/4.5-5.6, SB800
Here's a fun shot I got a few weekends ago with this lens:
The downside is that it is really heavy. It is a serious piece of glass. It does feel pretty macho though! Especially with the huge lens hood on it.
SLC supercross.
Beer.
If it were my $1000
I'd get the Sig 70-200 2.8
Keith Tharp.com - Champion Photo
I was at Best Buy today looking at the D5000 ... Oh my! I am going to rent it out for a week, see how it fits (like a glove, I'm sure) and I'm probably going to upgrade my body before I upgrade the lens. I've read other posts about how one should buy the lens first, upgrade later, but how will a "mancho" lens on my D40 with shutter lag do me any good at a sporting event if my shutter speed fails me when I need it the most??? Am I thinking straight?
I know the Nikon is way out of my league for now but I'm going to get there ... one day. The next best thing for me after all the reading is most likely the Sigma 80-200mm f/2.8. I like the thought of the extra 10mm.
Thanks everyone for the replies and photographs.
Bloomphotog ... I practically live on the water with my boat & this is the kind of stuff we see in our neck of the woods all the time. Cool capture.
www.zebleys.com
http://zebleysphotography.smugmug.com
If we do the math, 200mm at f5.6 on the D40 will look sharper and you stop action marvelously on the D300 200 mm f5.6 at 1600 iso with virtually zero noise. You can even bump up to 3200 and the noise is minimal. 6 stops of light extra... I'd go with the new body, and position myself where the flood lights will be behind me...
Nikon Shooter
It's all about the moment...
www.zebleys.com
http://zebleysphotography.smugmug.com
+1
But to go wide...really wide, and sharp...wonder what I could do you know?
been enjoying and doing more airshows so those lenses would be fun for those
thanks for reading even though I am not helping
Bloom ... like you stated, I've done my math for the last few days & I feel pretty good about that D300 coming in on Wednesday from Adorama. Why I concidered a 5000 for what I want to get into (sports) is something I'll never add up too. Although I'm giving too many +'s in some area's ( DOINK! ) I'm super excited and broke!!!!
Thanks everyone for your input ... If I can ever afford another lens (or anything else after that drop of $1500) outside of Nikon, Sigma wins hands down.
:ivar ,
Julie
www.zebleys.com
http://zebleysphotography.smugmug.com
GOOD LUCK
It's not what you look at that matters: Its what you see!
Nikon
http://www.time2smile.smugmug.com
www.zebleys.com
http://zebleysphotography.smugmug.com
www.smitchellphotography.com
Munising, Michigan
I have owned and made money with the Nikon 80-200/2.8 push pull pre-D from 1989 until I purchased the Sigma 70-200/2.8 HSM in 1999. The Sigma served mee" lens.
1+856.685.9435
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D700/D200/SB800/FX18-35 AFD Nikkor, 28-75/2.8 Tamron early with aperture ring,35-105/3.5-4.5 AFD Nikkor 50/1.4 AFD,70-200/2.8 VR AFS G Nikkor, 70-300/4.5-5.6VR ED AFS G Nikkor, FX-DX Sigma1.4x HSM EX APO Tele-Converter,DX 18-70/3.5-4.5 G DX AFS Nikkor 12-24/4.0 Tokina 2nd. version,Sekonic L358w/Pocket Wizard, SC29X2,Leitz table tripod w/largeball head,filters, adapters, reflectors, stands, Quantum batteries, tripods,monopods,heads et al
1+856.685.9435
edmichaels@comcast.net
D700/D200/SB800/FX18-35 AFD Nikkor, 28-75/2.8 Tamron early with aperture ring,35-105/3.5-4.5 AFD Nikkor 50/1.4 AFD,70-200/2.8 VR AFS G Nikkor, 70-300/4.5-5.6VR ED AFS G Nikkor, FX-DX Sigma1.4x HSM EX APO Tele-Converter,DX 18-70/3.5-4.5 G DX AFS Nikkor 12-24/4.0 Tokina 2nd. version,Sekonic L358w/Pocket Wizard, SC29X2,Leitz table tripod w/largeball head,filters, adapters, reflectors, stands, Quantum batteries, tripods,monopods,heads et al