Home > Canon 6D > Tokina 80-400mm f/4.5-5.6 AT-X Pro D Auto Focus Zoom Lens for Nikon AF-D

Tokina 80-400mm f/4.5-5.6 AT-X Pro D Auto Focus Zoom Lens for Nikon AF-D

July 17th, 2009

Tokina 80-400mm f/4.5-5.6 AT-X Pro D Auto Focus Zoom Lens for Nikon AF-D

This was the smallest zoom lens available that had a bright f/5.6 aperture at 400mm. Now Tokina has recreated the lens for the digital age. Still the smallest SLR lens available that zooms to 400mm, the AT-X 840 AF D has a smooth and quick internal focusing system that means the all-metal inner barrel that houses the heaviest glass elements does not have to rotate when the lens focuses, making it much faster than the previous models. Optically, the AT-X840 AF D has new multi-coatings applied to the elements that are formulated to compensate of the highly reflective CCD and CMOS sensors in today’s Digital SLR cameras. The new multi-coating greatly reduces the chance of internal flare or ghost reflections. A built-in low-profi (more…)

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  1. July 17th, 2009 at 19:56 | #1

    This is not a technical review. Just my personal observations. I’ve been taking pictures since I was 21 — Pentax Spotmatic and then Canon F-1. I’m not a professional but I think I know what a good image looks like.

    I purchased this lens with some trepidation. First the price did not indicate a great lens and there were some iffy reviews. Also it doesn’t have VR. I took a chance and bought it to replace a lens that didn’t have enough range. Its mounted on my D300. Frankly, if Tokina made this with a mount for equipment that had in camera stabilization it would be just about perfect.

    This lens is very compact, and the smallest available in this range. You can handhold this lens with most applications or use a monopod if walking around. While it doesn’t have VR, the long lenses that do are bazookas compared to this so that more or less cancels things out. One simply could not handhold the Nikon 80-400 (I know — I tried); the Sigma 120-400 or 150-500 are also much too large to handhold.

    This lens if very sharp except at the extreme 400 range where it gets a little soft, and that doesn’t make much difference because sharpening in processing fixes that (distinguish here between the fact that the lens is a little soft at this range as opposed to shaky hands).

    This lens even works with the Kenko 2x converter, but you have to have a good tripod and use good tripod technique (effective 1200 mm with the 1.5 crop factor — any lens will be difficult). By the way, there is some discussion that the AF and metering will not work with the converter. Mine works just fine — you simply have to have bright sun and use spot metering (Matrix has a hard time). My understanding is that the Nikon does not work with a converter (unless maybe its the super expensive Nikon version).

    It is a slow lens, so you have to have a lot of light (not a problem in Arizona). If you are at the lower end and your image is not too far away, the on camera flash will work for fill light. This may be because the lens itself is very compact so does not interfere with the flash. I did this today inside an aviary at the zoo.

    At the zoo today, intermittent sun and clouds. Using the bracketing function resulted in many fine images.

    The build quality is remarkable for a lens in this price range. I know Tokinas get pretty good reviews, but I think you could pound nails with this. And, because of its size (and resulting reduced weight), you can carry this all day. I know; I just did.

    All in all, this is a great lens for the money. Its much more lens for the money. I gave it 5 stars because its better than advertised. It doesn’t purport to be what it is not — its not a $5,000 lens. Its a good substantial lens. You would have to put down some serious bucks to get a better combination and versatility. It doesn’t have VR. I think a VR in this range would be so much larger (and they seem to be) that you could not handhold it anyway.

    Couple this lens with the 16-85 VR and the 50/1.8 (with some close up diopters) and you have a fine amateur kit without losing your entire inheritance.

  2. July 17th, 2009 at 19:56 | #2

    I have had this lens for over a year and i shot some really good pictures with it. It is by far the most compact 80-400 in the market and the sharpness and the colors are lot better than what you would expect from a third party manufacturer. (I also have the tokina 12-24 and that is also really good)

    The built Quality is Great it is solid, when you hold it you feel metal not some plastic. I also have the sigma 50-150 and it has HSM so one day while i was shooting some birds in flight i said to myself because tokina does not have an internal focus and focuses slower than a hsm sigma the sigma would be a better choice. man i was wrong. after shooting an hour with the sigma i decided to give tokina a try and it was much better. even though the focus was not as fast it was fast enough to catch birds and the 80-400 range was so much better than 50-150. on a D300

    If you are looking for a budget 80-400 do not even hesitate and buy this lens.

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