ADVERTISEMENT
LEICA SL-KITS - Unlock Your Creativity Today: Discover More

Tamron SP AF 200-500mm F/5-6.3 Di LD (IF) Interchangeable Lens Review

The Tamron SP AF 200-500mm F/5-6.3 Di LD (IF) is a relatively lightweight super-telephoto zoom lens which will allow frame-filling shots to be taken from distance.


| Tamron SP AF 200-500mm f/5-6.3 Di LD in Interchangeable Lenses
BUY NOW TAMRON SP AF 200-500mm f/5-6.3 Di LD
SEARCH AMAZON UK SEARCH AMAZON US
ADVERTISEMENT
Handling and features
Performance
Verdict
Specification

Tamron SP AF 200-500mm F/5-6.3 Di LD (IF) Interchangeable Lens Review: Tamron SP AF 200-500mm F5-6.3 Di LD (IF)

This super-telephoto zoom lens from Tamron costs around £865 and has an internal focus design and is relatively lightweight for its focal range. Photographers looking for something more telephoto than the standard 70-300mm range will look to a lens like this for capturing subjects such as birds and wildlife.

Sigma currently offer two lenses of a similar range. Their 150-500mm lens costs £695 and has optical stabilisation and a silent, hyper sonic focusing motor. They also offer a similar 120-400mm lens, which apart from being 100mm shorter at the long end is £100 cheaper than the 150-500mm. Sigma also offer a 500mm f/4.5 prime lens for those absolutely serious about the 500mm focal length. As a result it comes with a very serious price tag of around £3850.

Tokina's only super-telephoto lens is their 80-400mm f/4.5-5.6, which is currently the smallest and lightest 400mm zoom available. This lens costs around £570.

None of the main camera manufacturers currently offer a zoom lens covering up to 500mm. Canon's 100-400mm f/4-5.6L IS USM lens has an Image Stabiliser and silent focusing motor, but costs around £1168. Canon's 500mm f/4L IS USM will currently set you back around £5740.

Nikon's super-telephoto zoom lenses both stop at 400mm. The older and cheaper of the two is the 80-400mm VR, which has Vibration Reduction but costs around £1168. Their 200-400mm f/4 maintains the bright f/4 aperture throughout the zoom range, so could be used with a 1.4x teleconvertor to effectively give you a 280-560mm f/5.6 lens with VR, but the lens alone will set you back £4660. Nikon's 500mm f/4 prime telephoto lens costs £5740.

Sony offer a 70-400mm lens with a silent focusing motor, which is available for around £1300. Their only 500mm prime is a catadioptric one with a fixed aperture of f/8 that can be had for around £535.

Tamron SP AF 200-500mm f/5-6.3 Di LD (IF): Handling and features
Weighing in at only 1237g, this lens is surprisingly easy to hand hold for its size, being 227mm long. The light weight certainly helps when hand holding the lens over an extended period of time. I find the lens balances well with my Nikon D700 with or without the MB-D10 battery grip attached.
As there is no stabilisation on this lens, and the maximum aperture is quite modest at f/5-6.3, some kind of support such as a monopod of beanbag may be required when the light levels aren't ideal. A lightweight, yet sturdy removable magnesium alloy tripod foot is supplied for attaching such a support. The zoom ring is located just in front of the tripod mount and can be adjusted with the lightest of touches. A little more resistance in the zoom mechanism may have been welcome, as I did notice the zoom creeping forward if the camera was left tilted downwards unattended, such as when using a tripod. A zoom lock switch is provided to lock the lens at the shortest focal length during transport.

As the lens is an internal focus design, the lens does not extend during focus, and the front filter ring does not rotate. This is great for users of polarising filters as a rotating front element would change the polarisation effect as you focused. To further enhance the use of polarisers, a Filter Effect Control ring is supplied screwed into the 86mm front filter thread. This allows filters to be rotated easily, even when the huge supplied hood is attached.

The supplied hood is massive, so should do an excellent job of shielding the front element from extraneous light. Although this lens doesn't have a silent focus motor, the motor used isn't overly noisy, and focuses fast enough for most subjects.

Tamron SP AF 200-500mm f/5-6.3 Di LD (IF): Performance
For this review, the lens was tested on a 12Mp Nikon D700 using Imatest.

At 200mm this lens produces images with good resolution in the centre at every aperture setting. The quality towards the edges of the frame improves as the lens is stopped down, with the best quality being achieved at f/16.

By 300mm, this lens maintains it's good resolution in the centre of the image at all apertures. Peak performance is obtained at f/11 where the resolution in the centre is very good, and not too far behind towards the edges of the frame.

The quality is maintained at 500mm, with there being no clear peak in performance at any aperture although the resolution recorded at f/6.3 and f/8 is ever so slightly higher than when the lens is stopped down.

Resolution at 200mm Resolution at 300mm
Tamron SP AF 200-500mm F/5-6.3 Di LD (IF) Interchangeable Lens Review: Tamron SP AF 200-500mm F/5-6.3 Di LD (IF) Resolution at 200mm Tamron SP AF 200-500mm F/5-6.3 Di LD (IF) Interchangeable Lens Review: Tamron SP AF 200-500mm F/5-6.3 Di LD (IF) resolution at 300mm
Resolution at 500mm  
Tamron SP AF 200-500mm F/5-6.3 Di LD (IF) Interchangeable Lens Review: Tamron SP AF 200-500mm F/5-6.3 Di LD (IF) resolution at 500mm  

Telephoto lenses have traditionally been the ones to have the biggest issues with colour aberrations. This lens doesn't perform too badly, with chromatic aberration being kept well below acceptable levels at 200mm and 500mm. At 300mm however, the level of fringing rises a little, and increases as the lens is stopped down. Wide open it is more than acceptable, but stopped down to f/11 or smaller, it may start to become noticeable.

Chromatic Aberrations at 200mm Chromatic Aberrations at 300mm
Tamron SP AF 200-500mm F/5-6.3 Di LD (IF) Interchangeable Lens Review: Tamron SP AF 200-500mm F/5-6.3 Di LD (IF) chromatic aberration at 200mm Tamron SP AF 200-500mm F/5-6.3 Di LD (IF) Interchangeable Lens Review: Tamron SP AF 200-500mm F/5-6.3 Di LD (IF) chromatic aberration at 300mm
Chromatic Aberrations at 500mm  
Tamron SP AF 200-500mm F/5-6.3 Di LD (IF) Interchangeable Lens Review: Tamron SP AF 200-500mm F/5-6.3 Di LD (IF) chromatic aberration at 500mm  

At 200mm, light falloff towards the corners is well controlled with the corners only being 0.8 stops darker than the image centre. At 500mm, the effect may become more noticeable, with the corners being 1.7 stops darker than the centre of the image. Stopping down to f/11 will provide even illumination.

Imatest recorded 1.13% pincushion distortion at 200mm, which is already quite strong and may become noticeable in critical applications. The level of distortion stays roughly the same throughout the zoom range, actually decreasing slightly at 500mm to 1.03% pincushion.

Tamron SP AF 200-500mm f/5-6.3 Di LD Sample Photos


This lens' control of flare and ghosting is very good indeed. Strong point sources of light in the frame didn't cause any noticeable flare, or loss of contrast. The huge hood, which is half the length of the lens itself, does a sterling job of protecting the front element from extraneous light.

Tamron SP AF 200-500mm f/5-6.3 Di LD (IF): Verdict
Although this lens may be a little more expensive than some of the competition and it lack some features such as image stabilisation, the optical quality of this lens is good for the price.

Tamron SP AF 200-500mm f/5-6.3 Di LD (IF): Pros
Good resolution throughout the zoom range
Low CA at 200mm and 500mm
Relatively light weight
Filter effect control system useful when using a polariser

Tamron SP AF 200-500mm f/5-6.3 Di LD (IF): Cons
Higher CA levels at 300mm
Zoom creeps when lens is pointed downwards
86mm filter size

FEATURES
HANDLING
PERFORMANCE
VALUE FOR MONEY
OVERALL

Tamron SP AF 200-500mm f/5-6.3 Di LD (IF): Lens specification
Price: £865
Contact: http://www.tamron.co.uk
Filter size: 86mm
Format: Full-frame
Construction: 13 elements in 10 groups
Angle-of-view: 12°-5°
35mm equivalent focal length (on APS-C body): 300-750mm
Internal focusing: Yes
Image stabilisation: No
Minimum focus 250cm
Maximum aperture: f/5-6.3
Minimum aperture: f/32
Weight: 1237g
Size (lxw): 227mm x 93.5mm
In the box: Lens Hood, Padded Case

The Tamron SP AF 200-500mm f/5-6.3 Di LD (IF) costs £864.99 and is available from Warehouse Express here:

Tamron SP AF 200-500mm f/5-6.3 Di LD (IF) - Canon Fit
Tamron SP AF 200-500mm f/5-6.3 Di LD (IF) - Nikon Fit
Tamron SP AF 200-500mm f/5-6.3 Di LD (IF) - Sony/Minolta Fit

Buy Now

MPB

Sell or trade used photo and video kit with MPB

With MPB you can get a free instant quote for the kit you want to sell, including a trade-in all-in-one transaction - no need for callbacks or waiting for an email quote. Then, if you decide to sell, MPB will pick up your kit with a free insured DPD collection and you’ll get paid cash into your account within days. MPB will also keep you informed about the status of your gear at every step of the way and the whole process is carbon neutral.

Sell your unwanted gear with MPB

Amazon UK Logo

We don't have the latest price however the link below will take you to the most relevant items.

Tamron SP AF 200-500mm f/5-6.3 Di LD SEARCH
Amazon US Logo

We don't have the latest price however the link below will take you to the most relevant items.

Tamron SP AF 200-500mm f/5-6.3 Di LD SEARCH
MPB Logo

We transform the way that people buy, sell and trade in photo and video kit.

USED GEAR

Support this site by making a Donation, purchasing Plus Membership, or shopping with one of our affiliates: Amazon UK, Amazon US, Amazon CA, ebay UK, MPB. It doesn't cost you anything extra when you use these links, but it does support the site, helping keep ePHOTOzine free to use, thank you.

ADVERTISEMENT

Other articles you might find interesting...

Sony FE 16-35mm f/2.8 GM II Lens Review
Sigma AF 23mm f/1.4 Lens Review - X Mount
Sigma AF 100-400mm f/5-6.3 Lens Review - X Mount
Nikon Z 70-180mm f/2.8 Lens Review
NIKKOR Z 135mm f/1.8 S Plena Lens Announced
Nikkor Z DX 24mm F/1.7 Lens Review
Fujifilm XF 8mm F/3.5 Review
Best Third Party Nikon F Lenses (DSLR)

Comments

brian1208 Avatar
brian1208 20 11.8k 12 United Kingdom
9 May 2010 9:59PM
This lens is available used at very good prices (£300-400 from Mifsuds) which is why I picked one up for use with my 7D.

I've written up my initial findings in a blog here.

Its a useful tool and good value at this price, but does need good light to get the best from it, when the results compare very closely to those obtained from a sigma 150-500 OS on a nikon d300 (a friend shooting this combo at the same subjects / in the same light as me)

I've got a few images shot with it on my website here
hippysnapper Avatar
hippysnapper 14 17 United Kingdom
28 Jul 2011 10:29PM
Thanks for your comments Brian. I'm just researching a longer lens than I currently have, which is the 70 - 300.
philchild Avatar
philchild 6 3 United Kingdom
2 Aug 2018 7:15PM
its a very nice lens, however it does not have a Filter Effect Control ring
Login

You must be a member to leave a comment.

ePHOTOzine, the web's friendliest photography community.

Join for free

Upload photos, chat with photographers, win prizes and much more.

ADVERTISEMENT