View Full Version : WIldlife lens for D7100
I am looking for a quality zoom for wildlife (mainly birds) to marry with a Nikon D7100. Would the Nikon AF-S 28-300mm (FX format)
f/3.5-5.6G IF ED VR Lens have any advantages over the AF-S DX NIKKOR 18-300mm f/3.5-5.6G ED VR for wildlife photography?
Also, why is the AF-S DX NIKKOR 55-300mm f/4.5-5.6G ED VR so much cheaper than both these lenses?
mechawombat
04-05-2013, 8:35pm
I use the 55-300mm for almost all my wildlife shots.
AF-S 200-400mm f/4 G ED VR
out n about
05-05-2013, 7:54am
We use the sigma 150 -500 mm F5.6 -6.3, its a less expensive option to the nikkor zooms and although it is a bit slower it is sharp, has vr (sigma calls it optimal Stabilisation OS) and at 500mm it is 750mm on the dx crop.
Thanks to all for your responses, the choices out there are endless. Wayne your tag says it all & the 200-400 is WAY out of my price range.
Mechawombat 55-130 is a nice price but how do you find the image quality at max zoom?
Gayle & Colin, I have an older sigma 170-500 and the new one is on my list but is the stabilisation & low light gain equal to Nikon VRII?
The search for the truth continues :)
arthurking83
05-05-2013, 9:50am
If you ever plan on going to Fx at some stage, then get the 28-300, which is an Fx lens.
If not then the 18-300 would seem to be the most logical lens to get.
The main reason that the 55-300 would be cheaper is the lower multiplication factor of the lens, which makes for a less complicated design.
It'll be smaller and lighter.
If you don't need the focal length range below 28mm, then I'd be inclined to go with the 28-300, being the Fx lens is more likely to produce slightly better image quality across the Dx frame.
Other options you could choose from are the Sigma 100-300 f/4 which I think should work nicely on the D7100. Being F/4 gives you a one stop advantage.
If you can stretch the finances to the $2.5K mark, the new AF-S version of the 80-400mm would be the most ideal lens to go for.
Arthur, Thank you for taking time to give the extra detail. As the 28-300 is an Fx lens, do I immediately lose some of the low end focal range (28 becomes ~50mm) when I couple it to a Dx camera? Obviously also gaining at the 300mm high end by getting ~450mm (?). I agree AF-S 80-400 is best but price is iffy, might have to buy the Cheese & Kisses a new PC to compensate, :D but did not win Tatt's this week
ameerat42
05-05-2013, 1:58pm
...has vr (sigma calls it optimal Stabilisation OS) and at 500mm it is 750mm on the dx crop...
Optical Stabilisation, actually, and it's Field Of View on a crop body is (approx) equivalent to that of a 750mm lens on a Full Frame body...
But then again... Yes, I have the 50-500 version, but it's HEAVY.
Am.
I use a 300mm 2.8 with teleconverter, I used to use a 80-400 zoom then I realised after some time that I almost never throttled back - I always wanted more reach not less, so I gave up on the zoom idea for birds:)
mechawombat
05-05-2013, 5:21pm
I find the IQ at max zoom fine. I shoot Motorsport and Wildlife and it does a great job.
Sure we all want a 80-400 or a 50-500 but this is a great filler.
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