Originally Posted by
DanK
I have to say, having splurged on one of these in a moment of weakness not long ago, I am cheered by all of the positive comments. (Richard, I took your advice, and I have a Kirk replacement shoe arriving tomorrow.) In this case even more than some others, I will have confidence that it's my own fault, not a limitation of my gear, when I mess up.
The one problem I have noted already is that it's big and heavy enough that I won't have it with me unless I am pretty sure I will need it. When I bought my 70-200 years ago, I bought the f/4 partly because it weighs half what the f/2.8 weighs, and I can throw it in the bag even if I have no idea whether I will use it.
I don't understand this. If you compose so that the image on the sensor is the same size--as opposed to framing so that the image fills the same fraction of the frame on both cameras--and if the pixel density is similar, shouldn't the bokeh be identical? It's a function of the optics, not the size of the surface onto which you are projecting the image.