My results with the Tamron 28-300mm on the Canon 5DS were VERY disappointing. I know it wasn't a camera problem, as the photos I took with either the Canon 40mm pancake or Canon 50mm f/1,8 are fine. Unfortunately the lens I used most of the time on the Canon 5DS was indeed the zoom. I have some 5DS photos online in my flickr photostream and Hawaii 2023 album. But the majority of my photos online at flickr are with my other 2 cameras I had along, the Sigma DP3Quattro and the DP2Merrill. I'm also working to process on a new computer which has made it difficult to judge the lightness/darkness of my processing. So many of my early photos online (DP2Merrill mainly) are really too light. Every photo trip is a learning trip, correct?
I still haven't been able to analyze what was going on with the zoom. Windy conditions at great zoom length above 200mm? Maybe the UV filter contributing to aberrations? How the directional light was hitting the lens, ie north, south, east, west shots? Really puzzling to me as I had used the lens around Virginia before the trip rather extensively, with only a note to self that it wasn't as sharp as my 24-105mm. Much blurriness isn't visible in small versions, it's when I look at 100-200% that I realize, wow this is bad.
No similar problems with my Sigmas.
Here's one okay Canon shot toward the end of our stay on Molokai
More photos on flickr under my name Sandy Fleischmann all at large sizes. Typically 10MB to 20MB JPEGs online
2O6A1252 Canon 5DS Murphy's Beach area Molokai by Sandy Fleischmann, on Flickr