• AlanShpanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    Thinking about going away on holiday and taking as few lenses as possible.

    I love my 10-24 and that will be going with me. I also have the 16-80 and the 70-300. But can I reduce that to 2 lenses (for the two X-T5 bodies I have)? Has anyone used (and can comment on) the Tamron 18-300? Or the Fuji 18-135? Or something else?

    Thoughts appreciated on lens quality etc. compared to my existing lenses.

  • jabergpanorama_fish_eye
    535 posts
    2 years ago
  • robmas4229panorama_fish_eye
    2 posts
    2 years ago

    I owned the 18-135 for a while and was hoping it would negate the need for a tele zoom but 135 was just too short, so at the time I sold it and stuck with the 18-55 and 55-200 combo for a while.

    I recently did a two week trip to New Zealand and took my XT3, 16-80, 70-300 and the 27/2.8 on my XT30-II. The 16-80 brought home most of the photos by far, the 70-300 was for an event for which it did quite nicely. The T30 with the 27mm was a nice small setup for walking around the towns.

    There are some photographers over on that other forum that are very happy with the Tamron 18-300. Maybe paired with your 10-24 if you think you need it and a small fast (ish) prime and you'd be set.

    Enjoy your holiday.

  • AlanShpanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    I've ordered an 18-300 - if it doesn't come up to scratch, I'll send it back. Sorted. Especially as there's £100 off it this month.

    Alan

  • CAcreekspanorama_fish_eye
    123 posts
    2 years ago
  • AlanShpanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    I picked up the 18-300 today (a story in itself). Only taken a couple of pictures as the weather is horrible, so I'll do some proper testing (to my standard) tomorrow.

    It's quite a heavy beast for its size.

    Alan

  • AlanShpanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    Went out to my favourite pond where birds congragate - only to find no birds at all. So I came home again, but not before taking this picture.

    ATCF0075.JPG

    ATCF0075.JPG

    JPG, 20.2 MB, uploaded by AlanSh 2 years ago.

  • AlanShpanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    I ran some standard tests and I think it's going back. It is really soft on the right hand side, much less so on the left.

    Alan

  • CAcreekspanorama_fish_eye
    123 posts
    2 years ago

    Hard to say from your posted photo. I'll take your word for it. Where did you focus? Topaz Sharpen says Motion (very blurry) which seems odd at 1/680 sec.
    atcf0075-SharpenAI-Motion.jpg

    atcf0075-SharpenAI-Motion.jpg

    JPG, 7.6 MB, uploaded by CAcreeks 2 years ago.

  • AlanShpanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    This is the focus point - it was AF-S, single point. No motion at all. You can't really see any softness in this picture as it's in the clouds.

    image.png

    image.png

    PNG, 746.1 KB, uploaded by AlanSh 2 years ago.

  • AlanShpanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    On the other hand. it's easy to see in this picture at 100%

    ATCF0093.JPG

    ATCF0093.JPG

    JPG, 22.1 MB, uploaded by AlanSh 2 years ago.

  • DeletedRemoved user
    2 years ago

    Yep, a bit off-center according to my analysis**:

    atcf0093-Laplace Edge Det + lvls.jpg

    ** in the GIMP, Laplace Edge Detection, followed by Levels to bring out the edges.

    atcf0093-Laplace Edge Det + lvls.jpg

    JPG, 48.3 MB, uploaded by xpatUSA 2 years ago.

  • CAcreekspanorama_fish_eye
    123 posts
    2 years ago

    Cool technique, Laplace Edge Detection! I've seen it in GIMP but didn't know it could be used for that.

    To the eye, I thought lower right was worse than upper right, and at the extreme corner it is, but upper right gets worse faster.

    Reviews of this lens say it gets worse above 200mm.