Want something cheaper?
get the MF ones... The 400 f2.8 is about the same weight too about 5kg. The 600 f5.6 is 2.8kg...
the 600 is aperture 5.6 not 2.8 that's what makes the difference...you mean the autofocus motor is so heavy?
Jeanie, my humble opinion.Get the VR 300f2.8 with a tc17E II. If you can get the 200-400f/4 VR.
Else, the Sigma 120-300f/2.8 HSM DG is your best all rounder and value for money.
Sharing some sport shooting experience, the use of a zoom will help greatly.. you can frame your shots easily with only one camera body. If you use primes, you may need 2 bodies. 1 for the 600mm, another body for 300mm.. just my thoughts.
Tripod wise, you want mobility, use a monopod. If you want best of both worlds, CF models like Gitzo 1325 series offer great stablilty and weight.
you mean the autofocus motor is so heavy?
The weight difference between MF and AF lenses (especially for long lenses) may not be the nett weight of the additional motor assembly.
Very often, Nikon will re-design the optics and this will change the physical shape of the AF lens as well which explain the weight difference.
oic, so it's the elements or glass that really makes the diff.
but manual focus is out for me.
i think by the time i focus, the race is over.
this thread still going strong...
imho, focal length really depends on where you're shooting from and how you would like to frame it. for some of these events, 200mm is more than sufficient, where other shots would require 600mm... my suggestion, for the flexibility, 200-400f4.
the quick AF is usually not so much of a concern, unless you are really intending to pan to follow the cars. else prefocus with sufficient DoF... the cars will be going around for 40-50 laps, so you'll have plenty of chances to catch them.
note that this would be a night race, so lighting would likely be more of an issue than in a normal day race. however, i'm sure most of the track would be well lit (else the drivers would likely boycott the race), just be sure to catch a spot where the lighting is sufficient for good exposure, shandows and composition.
If you are going to shoot from Hotel room long lens like Nikon 600 or Sigma 300-800 will be required. At the street level Nikon 300 or 200-400 or Sigma 120-300 with monopod is better option. At the pit stop 70-200 if you are close. I am not sure how Singapore will setup its race track. The last time my wife went to oversea one the fence was rather high. Most photographers were standing on plateform. You already have 70-200 right? I recommend the 200-400, you can also use it for other after the race. One last thing, the cars are fast, I mean really fast. Can't focus lock if you are near that is why most pro give some distance with their tele Lens. Better chance at truning but there will have many others crowding. But I guess you wouldn't have problem getting through.
but i shot at sepang before, from pits, the cars really doesnt look that fast.
it's a funny thing.from the driver's pov, it looks fast.but from the pits, they dont look that fast.
maybe it's the sepang straights.near 900meters, even you floor till 200+km/h, it still looks pretty 'slow'.
:dunno:
but i shot at sepang before, from pits, the cars really doesnt look that fast.
it's a funny thing.from the driver's pov, it looks fast.but from the pits, they dont look that fast.
maybe it's the sepang straights.near 900meters, even you floor till 200+km/h, it still looks pretty 'slow'.
:dunno: