It’s the time of the year where people spend their holidays overseas. Although there are countries open up with the Vaccinated Travel Lane (VTL), we decide to have a short staycation in one of the hotels in the heart of the Singapore shopping belt.
All thanks to Mr. Keitaro So, Divisional Head of Fujifilm Asia Pacific, for providing the loan for X-S10 and XF23mm f1.4 WR, I have the opportunity to test out the lens during my stay.
I will be providing a review when I return the loaned units. But for now, I will just share what I have taken with this lens.
Disclaimer: 1. All the shots taken here are shot by me. 2. Some of the shots are slightly edited in Lightroom Classic to my preferences. Otherwise, the shots are straight out of the camera. 3. The opinions are based on my experience. If there is any mistake, please kindly drop me a message and I will gladly make the amendment. 4. I reserve ownership of these images, if you wish to use my images, please notify me.
Special thanks to Cles Distribution of Tamron Singapore for giving me the opportunity to loan the Tamron 18-300mm F3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD (Model B061) for Fuji mount for a review. At the time of releasing this review, I have returned the loan unit to Cles Distribution.
Disclaimer: 1. All the shots taken here are shot by me. 2. Some of the shots are straight out of the camera while others are edited via In-Camera Raw Processing and Adobe Lightroom Classic. 3. I reserve ownership of these images, if you wish to use my images, please notify me. 4. The opinions are based on my experience. If there is any mistake made, please kindly drop me a message and I will gladly make the amendment.
Tamron 18-300mm F3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD
Before I start, I wish to highlight that this is a lengthy sharing session of my personal experience with this lens but not too much on the technical specification. You may skip to the Conclusion if you wish to or just browse the photos.
Fuji X-T3 with Tamron 18-300mmFuji X-T3 with Tamron 18-300mm
A Little History
Tamron has a long history of producing lenses and they are the pioneer of producing high-ratio zoom lenses. AF 28-200mm F3.8-5.6 was the first all-in-one zoom lens that was launched in 1992 and since then, Tamron has never stopped innovating and creating many “first” in the photography industry. In other words, Tamron is an expert in this field.
As the name of this lens has suggested, it is an ultra-zoom lens that features a 16.6x zoom ratio. Besides having a focal length from 27mm to 450mm (full-frame equivalent). At 18mm focal length, this lens is capable of shooting at a Minimum Object Distance (MOD) of 15 cm with a maximum magnification ratio of 1:2 and MOD at 1 meter at the tele end with a maximum magnification ratio of 1:4. That is a pretty remarkable piece of engineering to me as I love to shoot close up a lot.
It is a plastic lens body with a metal rear mount bayonet. To be honest, the experience is not as good as the metal-constructed lens but it is still feels solid and does not feel cheap on my hand. Rotating the zoom ring is smooth while giving you some little friction. Do note that when the lens zooms to 300mm, the physical length of the lens does extend to almost 3/4 times its original length.
Unlike most of the Fujifilm lenses, it does not come with an aperture ring, that’s means you have to control the aperture via the frontcommand dial on the camera body. If you wish to purchase a filter to protect the front lens element, it has a filter size of 67mm, which the cost is on the affordable side.
It weighs 620 grams which are acceptable for an ultra-zoom lens. By looking at the numbers, the lens seems to be heavy. Fear not, the weight distribution is evenly throughout the lens.
Image Quality
During the day, the image quality across all focal lengths is great. I am surprised that the images are decent and beyond my expectation. Of course, the image quality is not comparable to prime lenses but not too far behind from the shorter zoom ratio lenses. Different lenses are created for different purposes, so it is not a fair comparison if you are comparing it with other lenses directly.
Also, I am not expecting creamy, nice, and beautiful bokeh produces by this lens, the result is quite acceptable for me. It still does its job well for separating the subject from the foreground/background. The good thing about its bokeh is that it still produces smooth and nice fall-off and it does not give harsh and disturbing background blur.
If someone is concerning whether the aperture at F6.3 for 300mm does not give a good background bokeh, well, I think this has to depend on what genres you are shooting with. At least for my shoots, I think the bokeh is okay.
Focusing
Thanks to the VXD (Voice-coil eXtreme-torque Drive) linear motor focus mechanism, the focusing is pretty fast at all focal lengths and silent under the sun. The focus is quite accurate at most focal lengths but I do miss some shots at 300mm. I am wondering if it is due to the small aperture at 300mm.
As for dim lighting situations or nighttime, the focusing speed is noticeably reduced. At 18mm, the focusing speed is still not too bad. However, as the focal length increases, the focusing speed is getting slower and more focus hunting is observed too. I think this is also due to the small aperture value at 300mm.
Optical Stabilization
This lens is equipped with Tamron’s proprietary VC (Vibration Compensation) image stabilization, which helps to compensate for unwanted camera movements, especially under low light situations. While the official statement does not indicate the number of f-stops the lens can deliver, I tested and I manage to get decently sharp photos at 1/14 sec at 300mm. I think I can confirm that VC does work reasonably well under such a situation.
I have mentioned the MOD earlier. But what I want to mention here is how impressive the MOD is. If you want to shoot at 18mm, basically your lens is very close to the subject. It is surprisingly a fun perspective to shoot with.
Soft vignetting is observed throughout the focal lengths but it can be easily correctly via post-processing. Also, I notice some softness at 300mm at F6.3 for some shots but it gets slightly better if the aperture is lower to F8 onwards.
Left: Fuji X-T3 . Tamron 18-300mm @ 300mm . f8 . 1/210″ . ISO 160 . Classic Negative Right: Fuji X-T3 . Tamron 18-300mm @ 300mm . f8 . 1/220″ . ISO 160 . Classic Negative Both shots are taken at the same spot of the previous photo.
This lens comes with a Zoom Lock switch where it locks the zoom ring at 18mm and prevents the lens from creeping due to the weight of the lens while on the move. This mechanical switch is common among all long barrel lenses and I am glad that the Tamron engineers do include it in this lens as well.
This is another thing that I like about this lens and I think it is worth mentioning. If I want to change the focal length from 18mm to 300mm, all it takes is to rotate the zoom ring 45° and I have arrived at 300mm.
This lens is actually quite a versatile lens and it’s a great lens of its class. If the image quality is not much of a concern, this lens basically can shoot anything under the sun.
This lens also gives a good focal length for a photographer who is exploring different kinds of genres without breaking his wallet. If a photographer wants to travel light for his overseas trip, this is one good option too. Besides, if the photographer wants to do a simple product shoot with budget studio lights, this lens is capable of it too.
This is Tamron very first lens for Fujifilm users and I think this is a wise choice to start off with. That’s because Fujifilm does not have this level of the all-in-one zoom lens in its lens lineup. The closest that Fujifilm has is the 18-135mm and it is nowhere near what Tamron has to offer. Not only that, it is selling at USD 699 (SGD 1088). With such competitive pricing, I think it will attract lots of interested photographers.
Frankly speaking, I am excited to see more and more 3rd party manufacturers stepping into Fujifilm X-system. Not only this gives Fuji users more lens varieties to choose from, but also provides healthy competition with other APS-C manufacturers.
By the way, if you are in Singapore and interested to buy this lens, do drop by SLR Revolution. As far as I know, they are one of the leading local retailers carrying this lens.
Thank you for reading.
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