Originally Posted by
Manfred M
Antonio - I went the superzoom lens route during my recent trip to Brazil and Bolivia; I took around 5000 shots with the full-frame Nikkor 28-300mm lens over a 1 month period, so I got to know it well and have a fairly good overview of what works well and where it could perform better.
The main reason I opted for this approach is that I wanted to travel reasonably light and being able to carry a single body and single lens were the primary consideration. Spending a month living out of a 50 litre backpack plus my camera bag in conditions that ranged from tropical to near freezing meant that appropriate clothing took precedence over camera gear.
Frankly, I missed my usual lenses. I recognize the tradeoffs I was making and the four aspects I missed the most between this lens and my usual assortment I travel with were:
1. Much darker viewfinder given that the lens was 1 - 2 stops slower than the /2.8 lenses I usually shoot with. These are the measured apertures and I believe that the light transmission is about one stop lower than the theoretical value which was a handicap in low light situations;
2. Slower focus speeds versus my usual lenses. I suspect that is simply the difference between pro and lower end lenses;
3. Inferior lens coating which meant I got more veiling flare in my shots than I am used to; and
4. It was not quite wide enough. I do a lot of shooting at a 24mm focal length and 28mm was often simply not quite wide enough. At those focal lengths, every mm is important.
The lens has a lot more distortion (which can be corrected in raw conversion) and has lower microcontrast (also correctable, to a point).
The lens worked as well as I had expected and in my view, it was the correct purchase for my trip. I expect I will use it again from time to time, but it will likely not be used other than in situations where I need to limit myself to a single lens. I'm a lot happier with the performance of my other lenses, even though they take up more space and weigh a lot more.