Godfrey DiGiorgi mused: > > My primary use for a zoom in this range is for racing on the Isle of > Man, where I found a 70-200 would have been just about perfect for the > sight lines I normally work with.
Then what you need is the 80-200/2.8 :-) > A couple of things have caused me to re-think whether this was the > right lens for the job. > - The A70-210 is a pretty large, heavy lens. Not after you've used the f2.8 it isn't > - It's zoom and focus action is not particularly quick (heavily damped). Again, try the f2.8. That's not overly-fast in manual operation. > An AF lens which is a bit lighter and has the ability to run > follow-focus in Sports preset mode might be a better choice. I'm more > inclined to like the fixed-length design of the 100-300 rather than the > telescoping design of the 80-320. If the 100-300 is satisfactorily > sharp in the target zoom range, it might be a more attractive > alternative to me. Both the 80-320 and the 100-300 are lighter than the > A70-210 (by 100g and 50g respectively according to Dimitrov's site) and > I like the two-ring design for action work more than the push-pull > combined focus-zoom as well. I prefer a one-touch, myself. But, again, the f2.8 suits your style. All joking aside, the 80-200/f2.8 is an excellent workhorse lens for motorsport photography - it even works pretty well with a 1.4x TC for those occasions where you want the extra length. The drawbacks, of course, are obvious - it's heavy, and it's not cheap.

