Randy all beautifully posed birdies...I like #1 best even if it has a lot of space acreage around it...#2 -- is too cute...and the last one, I can feel your frustration... and know why...is your Sigma 400mm a fixed lens?
Nice set.
Nice series
Nice Randy! Love #2
Enjoyable series. Number two is my pick.
Nice images. I especially like #2. I remember looking at a Sigma like that when I wanted a long lens. I ended up purchasing a used Tokina 400mm f/5.6 ATX lens.
I looked for some of the images I shot with my old Tokina 400mm f/5.6 lens but, could not find any. I didn't really use it for a long time.
The image quality of the Tokina came pretty close to what I get with my Canon 400mm f/5.6L lens (especially at f/8 or f/11) but, the auto focus was far-far slower and less accurate; meaning no fast moving subjects.
However, I only paid one hundred U.S. Dollars for that Tokina and it was lighter in weight and could focus closer than my 400mm f/5.6L. Both lenses had a sliding lens hood which I love!
By the way, I tried the Tokina on some racing hydroplane shots and the auto focus did not measure up. I got the 400mm f/5.6L and a 300mm f/4L IS, used, from an acquaintance who needed to dump these lenses for faster glass. I don't remember exactly what the price was that I paid for these two but, remember it was what a new 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS lens cost. That is the deal I made with my friend.
Last edited by rpcrowe; 7th June 2015 at 08:02 PM.
Richard, they sound very similar. The Sigma is slow for AF and tends to hunt at inopportune times. In all honesty, my Nikon 70-200 f/4 is certainly faster to capture focus but still hunts when conditions get messy. Either way, I've just learned when to switch to manual focus. I love the focus ring on the Sigma, it occupies the space of 80% the length; kinda easy to locate at critical times.