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Canon,
Sigma and Tamron 70-200 f/2.8 lenses (and 100-400)
The 70-200 f/2.8 zooms are good lenses
for sport and portrait photos; for nature photography, 200mm usually
is a bit too short: nevertheless, I was curious to see how the
Tamron and Sigma 70-200 2.8 performs in comparison with the much,
much more expensive Canon 70-200 IS. Other than that, I wanted to
compare these lenses with one of my favorite Canon zooms - the
100-400 IS - too see the difference between the versatile canon lens
and the 70-200 zooms with 1.4x and 2.0x teleconverters.
Specifications
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Canon 70-200 2.8 IS
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Sigma 70-200 2.8
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Tamron 70-200 2.8
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Canon 100-400
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Focal length
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70-200 mm
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70-200 mm
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70-200 mm
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100-400 mm
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Construction
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23 elements/18 groups
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18 elements/15 groups
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18 elements/13 groups
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17 elements/14 groups
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Macro ratio
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0.17x (1:5.8)
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0.28x (1:3.5)
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0.32x (1:3.1)
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0.20x (1:5.0)
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Max Aperture
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f/2.8
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f/2.8
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f/2.8
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f/4.5-5.6
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Stabilization
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Yes
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No
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No
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Yes
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Autofocus
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Ultrasonic motor
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Ultrasonic motor
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Lens motor
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Ultrasonic motor
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Closest Focus
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1.4 meters
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1.0 meters
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0.95 meters
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1.8 meters
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Dimensions
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82 x 197 mm
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86 x 184 mm
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89 x 194 mm
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92 x 189 mm
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Weight
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1590 g
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1370 g
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1150 g
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1360 g
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Weather sealing
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Yes
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No
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No
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No
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Price
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$ 1700
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$ 730
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$ 680
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$ 1450
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Announced
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2001
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2007
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2008
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1997
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Built
quality, stabilization and autofocus
The Canon 70-200 2.8 has the best built
quality; it has a professional, solid look, and it is weather
sealed. The Sigma and the Tamron are similar; they are good, but not
as good as the Canon. The Tamron has a better painting than the
Sigma that scratches very easily as all Sigma EX lenses; on the
other hand, the zoom ring and the focus ring of the sigma feels more
solid, while the rings of the Tamron are a bit too smooth. In
particular, if you use manual focus the Sigma and the Canon allows
to focus with more precision, while with the Tamron it is enough to
rotate slightly the focus ring to move a lot the focus point.
All three lenses offers good AF speed,
but the Canon is clearly the best in this respect, it is really
fast! The Sigma and the Tamron have a slightly slower autofocus (the
Tamron lacks of ultrasonic motor, so the AF is slower and noisier).
An advantage of the Sigma and the Canon is the possibility to focus
manually even during AF, thanks to the ultrasonic AF motor, while
with the Tamron it is not possible.
The Canon is the only 70-200 of the
group that offers image stabilization. This is another big advantage
for the Canon; IS helps a lot when handholding the lens.
Image quality comparison
I have tested the lenses on my Canon
1DsIII (21 megapixel, FF). The lenses was mounted on tripod; I have used mirror lock up and self timer. The following
images are 100% crop from the unprocessed RAW file. (note: c70 is
Canon 70-200 IS, s70 is Sigma 70-200, t70 is Tamron 70-200 and c100 is
Canon 100-400 IS). All lenses had been tested both wide open and
stopped down by one stop.
For the 70mm focal lenght, I have used
a different test target than the one used for 200, 280 and 400mm,
because at 70mm is was not possible to fill the frame with the small
test target used for the longer focal lenghts.
70mm, center:
|
wide
open |
f/4 |
| c70 |
 |
 |
| s70 |
 |
 |
| t70 |
 |
 |
70mm, corner:
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wide
open |
f/4 |
| c70 |
 |
 |
| s70 |
 |
 |
| t70 |
 |
 |
At 70mm, all tree lenses gives
identical image quality in the center, excellent sharpness both wide
open and at f/4. In the corners, instead, the Tamron is the
sharpest; the Canon is very close, while the Sigma is softer.
200mm, center:
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wide
open |
f/4 |
| c70 |
 |
 |
| s70 |
 |
 |
| t70 |
 |
 |
| c100 |
|
 |
200mm, corner:
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wide
open |
f/4 |
| c70 |
 |
 |
| s70 |
 |
 |
| t70 |
 |
 |
| c100 |
|
 |
At 200mm, all 70-200 shows similar
image quality in the center; they are ok at f/2.8 and good at f/4.
The 100-400 has a little more contrast and sharpness, but its
maximum aperture at 200mm is just f/5.0. In the corners, it is a
completely different story. The Canon and the Tamron produces nearly
identical image quality; the Sigma has more chromatic aberration and
it is the softest, while the Canon 100-400 has much better image
quality than all three 70-200.
280mm (70-200 + 1.4 TC), center:
|
wide
open |
f/5.6 |
| c70 |
 |
 |
| s70 |
 |
 |
| t70 |
 |
 |
| c100 |
|
 |
280mm (70-200 + 1.4 TC), corner:
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wide
open |
f/5.6 |
| c70 |
 |
 |
| s70 |
 |
 |
| t70 |
 |
 |
| c100 |
|
 |
In the center at 280mm, the three
70-200 2.8 give similar results, both wide open and at f/5.6 (the
Tamron is a little sharper at f/5.6, but it is not a big
difference). The 100-400 is much shaper than all three 70-200.
In the corners, the Tamron 70-200,
Canon 70-200 and Canon 100-400 are similar (the Tamron is an hair
sharper), even though the 100-400 has much less chromatic aberration
the the 70-200 zoom. The corners are the Achille's heel of Sigma
70-200: it is much softer and it has more chromatic aberration than
the other lenses.
400mm (70-200 + 2.0x TC), center:
|
wide
open |
f/8 |
| c70 |
 |
 |
| s70 |
 |
 |
| t70 |
 |
 |
| c100 |
 |
 |
400mm (70-200 + 2.0x TC), corner:
|
wide
open |
f/8 |
| c70 |
 |
 |
| s70 |
 |
 |
| t70 |
 |
 |
| c100 |
 |
 |
At 400mm in the center, all
70-200 2.8 zooms give poor image quality wide open; the Canon
100-400 is way better. At f/8, all lenses show an improvement,
but the Sigma 70-200 and the Canon 70-200 are still quite
poor; the Canon 100-400 is miles ahead. Surprisingly, the
Tamron 70-200 at f/8 comes close to the Canon 100-400, and it
is much better than the other two 70-200 (while wide open
there wasn't much difference between the three 70-200).
In the corner, the 100-400 is
once again the clear winner. The Tamron is the sharpest of the
70-200 zooms, while the Canon and the Sigma are very poor in
the corners.
Conclusions
The results of this test are
interesting, but they are in line with my expectations, at
least for the 100-400 vs 70-200 comparison. The
70-200 lenses are not a good choice if you need reach; indeed,
the Canon 100-400 offers much better image quality than every
70-200 + 1.4x or 70-200 + 2x. Even the expensive Canon 70-200
2.8 is much worse than 100-400, at 400mm. If you don't plan to
use a lot the 2.8 aperture, I'd recomment to buy the 100-400 -
it is a much better lens for nature photography.
If you want a 70-200 2.8,
instead, the choice depens by the budget and by the sensor
size of your camera. In the center, all three 70-200 are quite
similar, so on APS-C you won't see image quality differences.
If you don't mind the lack of image stabilization, I'd
recommend the Sigma, it is much cheaper than the Canon and it
has better autofocus than the Tamron. Overall the Canon is the
best, but it is way more expensive, so you have to evaluate
if it is worth the price depending by your esigencies.
On fullframe cameras, it is a
different story. All three lenses are not great in the
corners, but while the Canon and the Tamron are close
(actually, the Tamron is slightly sharper), the Sigma is
really soft in the corners. On FF, I recommend the Canon (if
you have high budget) or the Tamron, that is an extraordinary
lens for its price, in terms of image quality.
Do you have
comments or questions?
If you have comments or questions about this
article, feel free to ask in the Juza
Nature Photography Discussion Forum!
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