Nikon 70-200 f2.8

Sudipto

Senior Member
I have Nikon 80-400 f/4.5 to f/5.6 g lens with ed and vr ii. I mostly use it for bird photography. The heading is wrong it should be 70-200 instead of 80-200

I take landscape and architecture photography along with some travel and portrait.

There are a lot of good words I read on Internet about the new 70-200 f/2.8 lens. Some says it is an essential lens. As I also use 24-120 kit lens I felt the 70-200 is overlapping so did not spent on it.

Need suggestion is 70-200really makes difference over 80-400 for general travel cum landscape and portrait photography? Is this useful to have it when I already have 80-400? If yes then under what circumstances?

By the way I am using D750 and D500 bodies.


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jc32750

Senior Member
Re: Nikon 80-200 f2.8

If it was me I’d go for one of the other f2.8 lenses for now


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hark

Administrator
Staff member
Super Mod
Contributor
Re: Nikon 80-200 f2.8

I don't have either of these lenses although I do have the Nikon 70-200mm f/2.8 VRii. Comparing the 2 lenses you mentioned, both are very similar in weight and length. So the real difference is in the glass. The 70-200mm is much faster and has a consistent aperture of f/2.8 whereas your 80-400mm has a variable aperture (the maximum aperture changes when it is zoomed out).

What that means is you would have a shallower depth of field with the 70-200mm. The extra speed it offers is also helpful. If you take a lot of portraits or do lots of low light photography, an f/2.8 lens is fantastic. It doesn't look like you do much, if any, sports so whether or not you'd benefit enough from this lens is questionable. Tamron makes a 70-200mm f/2.8 that gets great reviews. If you really want a 70-200mm f/2.8 lens, you should consider that one.
 

Whiskeyman

Senior Member
Re: Nikon 80-200 f2.8

The Nikon lens lineup includes both 80-200 mm and 70-200 mm lenses. I don't have any experience with the 80-400 mm, but do have experience with both the 80-200 and 70-200 lenses. (Used to own the 80-200 mm and now own the 70-200 AF-S VR II lens.) The 70-200 mm lens is better than the 80-200 mm was for me, and from what I hear, the newest 70-200 mm E lens is even better. Whether having it over your 80-400mm is better or not, I can't answer. That answer also depends upon which version of the 80-400 you now own and use.

WM
 

singlerosa_RIP

Senior Member
Re: Nikon 80-200 f2.8

Everyone should have a fast 70-200. I have the VRII and previously had the 80-200 dual ring. While my 24-70 gets the most use, the 70-200 is my favorite. The new version is probably awesome.
 

pendennis

Senior Member
Re: Nikon 80-200 f2.8

I owned the Nikkor 80-200 f2.8 AF for quite a long time, but I traded it for a 70-200 f4 VR. There are more occasions where the weight is a consideration, and not the lens speed. That stated, I found a great deal on a Sigma 70-200 f2.8 DG HSM, and it's become a very valuable addition when I "need the speed". I also have the Nikkor 80-400, and the 200-500 f5.6. For various reasons, they're all indispensable when they're needed for a particular setting.

The newer Nikkor 70-200 f2.8 VR-II is a fairly expensive option, but you may find the "VR-I" version for less money, and it's certainly a fine lens.
 

Sudipto

Senior Member
Nikon 80-200 f2.8

How do you like the 200-500 compared to the 80-400?


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80-400 is undoubtedly superior. My success rate is significantly higher than my Co photographers in bird photography. Moreover it is easier to carry than 200-500.


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spb_stan

Senior Member
The newest 70-200 is superior in optics so has great usefulness for everything from architecture detail, event, portraiture, close in wildlife and is small enough to use as a walking around lens. I have a number of good portrait style lenses, including 2 different 85mm(1.4 and 1.8), 135 2.0 DC, 50 1.4 Sigma, and 70-200 2.8 and fully 1/2 of my portraits and candids are with the 70-200. For travel, the 70-200 f/4 is lighter a lot lower cost and has excellent optics. As a general purpose lens it is great. But the 2.8e is even better.
For less than 1/2 the price the newest Tamron-SP-70-200mm-F28-Di-VC-USD-G2 is getting very good reviews.
 

singlerosa_RIP

Senior Member
Buy this lens. You'll have it forever. Easy for me to say. I first stumbled into a super deal on the 80-200 2.8 dual ring and then sold it when I ran into an equally great deal on a pristine 70-200m VRII. Money aside, the 70-200 is fantastic and if you can, you should own one. Great on DX and FX bodies.
 

pendennis

Senior Member
Re: Nikon 80-200 f2.8

How do you like the 200-500 compared to the 80-400?


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Horses for different courses. The 80-400 gives a lot of range in that it has 80-200, but the 200-500 has it at the long end. I use the 500mm setting far more often than 80-200 on the 80-400.

I like the fact that the 80-400 will work with my F6, because it's a "G" and compatible. The 200-500 has the electromagnetic aperture, and isn't compatible with any of my film cameras; a small dislike, though.

The optical performance is weighed in favor of the 200-500, just based on my usage and observations. I have no empirical data to support this, though.
 

spb_stan

Senior Member
Re: Nikon 80-200 f2.8

I am facing the same challenges. That’s why gathering support


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Try "Honey I really need to this lens to capture your unique beauty that only the finest lenses can" You can mention that while presenting her with her favorite flowers.

I didn't have a girlfriend when I got my 70-200 2.8 but one of the first girls I shot in an event liked the photos so much we started dating and have been together ever since. Flattering portraits are great tools to get what you want;>)
 
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