





Please stay away from the 75-300 mm lenses, they are soft from 200 mm on. In other words, the image quality isn't good.



I spoke to my photography teacher and was told that it looks pretty good for me. (My teacher has the Canon EOS 5D Mark II
I want that one....
)
If the tripod doesn't seem good when I get it I'll probably find a new one because I don't like trusting a piece of plastic for $650 worth of equipment! 

Please stay away from the 75-300 mm lenses, they are soft from 200 mm on. In other words, the image quality isn't good.
I wouldn't agree with you there Kris.....I got loads of nice pictures out of my canon 75-300 non IS....it's a perfect lens for a beginner....you really have to learn its limits and it helps you develop your photography until you can afford something more expensive
All photos taken in 2007 here were taken with a 400D and 75-300
.mic



I'm used to taking 20+ shots with my current camera to find one that is actually decent and won't burn the eyes!
My teacher has the Canon EOS 5D Mark III want that one....
)


I'm used to taking 20+ shots with my current camera to find one that is actually decent and won't burn the eyes!

After a bit of research I've decided to skip the deal and just get the camera and get the 55-250mm IS lens instead. I saw the two (75-300mm no IS and 55-250mm IS) compared and the picture quality at full zoom between the two was significantly different. I already have a camera bag and tripod and will probably get a good tripod sooner or later.
Thanks for the help everyone!
One more question: do you typically use a tripod for aircraft spotting? I wouldn't think so because you can hold the camera at any shutter speed generally faster than 1/60th of a second.
Thanks again!



After a bit of research I've decided to skip the deal and just get the camera and get the 55-250mm IS lens instead. I saw the two (75-300mm no IS and 55-250mm IS) compared and the picture quality at full zoom between the two was significantly different. I already have a camera bag and tripod and will probably get a good tripod sooner or later.
Thanks for the help everyone!
One more question: do you typically use a tripod for aircraft spotting? I wouldn't think so because you can hold the camera at any shutter speed generally faster than 1/60th of a second.
Thanks again!




IS or no IS? I would be using a tripod and probably using max zoom at some points.





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