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Product Reviews:
   
Want a perfect lens? Here it is. (At least as far as telezooms go),
March 7, 2006
Reviewer: Roger J. Buffington
This lens has only two "faults." First, it is big and heavy--quality
construction often yields a heavy lens. Second, once the photographer has
seen the results that this lens can produce, there is a likelihood that he
or she will be unhappy with the other lenses in the camera bag.
Results first: the images are razor sharp with this zoom mounted on my
Nikon D70s. I can get shots that I never could get before because this
lens is so crisp that subjects taken at a distance nevertheless can be
cropped to produce an acceptable close-up image. Subjects taken at more
normal distances are breathtakingly sharp--as if shot with an excellent
prime lens. This is a fast lens (F/2.8 throughout its entire zoom range).
Almost more importantly, this lens has the best "Bokeh" that I have ever
experienced in a lens. "Bokeh," to the extent that I understand the
concept (it is a Japanese word meaning roughly "unfocused"), is a word
describing whether the out-of-focus portion of an image (i.e. a blurred
background in a photo in which only the subject is in focus) has a
pleasing look to it. This lens produces wonderful, creamy Bokeh. The
sharpness and Bokeh, combined with the excellent bright color rendition of
this lens, makes this one a true classic.
I have occasionally experienced minor ghosting on this lens when shooting
into a very bright subject, i.e. the sun reflecting off of the ocean. This
is a normal shortfall of a zoom lens comprised of a multitude of elements,
and I have sometimes experienced this. But such occasions are rare.
The autofocusing action of this lens is very good. Even birds at very long
distances usually produce a quick, snappy autofocus lock on my Nikon D70s.
Very seldom does it "hunt" for an AF lock, and these occasions are likely
due to operator error rather than the lens. This lens also features
Vibration Reduction (VR) which enables it to produce acceptable images
below what an F/2.8 lens would otherwise be suitable for. The VR really
works, too, although it is by no means a panacea for dim lighting.
This is one of Nikon's professional lenses, and the quality of
construction is excellent. The critical mount is metal, and the entire
lens is built like a tank. The lens comes with a nice squeeze-style lens
cap, and a very good lens hood that can be easily reversed for storage.
The reader can see that I am extremely enamored with this lens. The reason
is that, notwithstanding its bulk and weight, this lens produces the best
nature shots that I have ever managed to take, by far.
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Already a Legend!, May 31, 2005
Reviewer: Robert Brody "Capt. RB"
Yes, this lens is already legend, and no, it's not just a bunch of people
trying to justify spending a whole lot of cash on a lens. Make no mistake,
this lens is BIG and expensive. It's not fitting into your travel bag nor
is it at home at a friend's party. For that bring the 18-70mm, 28-200G or
just bring a cheaper P&S type camera in case you spill beer on it!
The 70-200 VR is a pro level lens that gets almost everything right. It's
size is the byproduct of an optical design that really makes few, if any
compromises. This lens is SHARP...as sharp as my 50mm prime and sharper
wide open that you might believe or expect. On a D70 the focus is
lightening fast and quite exact. Color rendition is the best I've seen. I
do much less post processing when this baby is on the D70.
On the problematic side, this lens is BIG. It's heavy and in the way,
though reasonably easy to grasp. I added a Harbortronics portrait grip and
the handling/balance is improved. It needs a big bag and focuses down to a
bit under 5 feet. While it's a fantastic portrait lens, you need room to
get the most out of it. My first shots with this lens put my more
experienced lenses to shame. The bokeh, or quality of out-of-focus areas
were creamy and pleasing. Subjects had a 3D quality to them.
The VR system is exactly what you'd expect. I sat on my couch, framed the
text on my DVD player about 8 feet away and shot at F/2.8 ISO 200 for a
1/2 second exposure. At 200mm (300mm on the D70) the image was sharp.
Without VR I got a big blur.
The real question is: Do you need a 1700 dollar lens?
Answer: Only if you want it. The quality is all there at a level that has
people talking about this lens like it's magic. I have friends who shoot
pro with Canon and Nikon. Even the Canon users say the 70-200VR is the
best of it's kind. Sell a kidney and buy one!
Back to Nikon 70-200mm f/2.8G ED-IF AF-S VR Zoom
Nikkor Lens for Nikon Digital SLR Cameras
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