Originally Posted by
Panama Hat & Camera
As I wrote in the thread
A DSLR superzoom camera, my decision of buying the lens Nikkor 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 was influenced by the reviews published by DXOMARK, Photographyblog and Ken Rockwell.
These reviews indicated to me that the Nikkor 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 was sharper than the Nikkor 18-300mm f/3.5-5.6.
I discovered recently other reviews with the same opinion, but I found another review that told me otherwise: PCMag.
I can not compare the two lenses, so I decided to compare the reviews on the lens I have (mainly the analyses on the resolution of the image). I noticed that recomended apertures and opinions varied from review to review.
Hi,
After having been around cameras since the 60's I must say my review-reading has essentially boiled down to three steps:
1. See if IR have tested the lens, and check their blur diagram (if that not OK, I abort at once).
2. See if Optical Limits (used to be photozone.de), and see if they have tested the lens, and look at their diagrams (if not OK, abort!).
3. Go to Lenstip and do the same, abort if not OK.
4. If OK, I read IR's reviews, read everything I can find at Lenstip, LensRentals, and Optical Linmits.
5. If I'm still is interested, I might even read Ken!
DxO and other technical sites are OK for cameras, but handling is much more important than facts, as cameras are supposed to be scrapped after five years, to be replaced by other updated cameras.
I use Nikon and Sigma, and have one Samyang (their 14/2.8).
Mostly shoot birds, so I have two long Sigma zooms, and a couple of shorter (70-300) Nikons.
Plus macros, and primes.