02-08-2015 11:21 AM
Can I adapt a Canon EF70-200 f/2.8L IS II USM ...and a Nikon D40X body? If so, what adapter?
Thanks, Tony
02-08-2015 05:22 PM
No. You can adapt Nikon lenses to Canon but not Canon to Nikon because of the distance between the lens mount & sensor.
02-08-2015 07:04 PM
02-08-2015 09:39 PM
To do that I recommend that you start a new thread which tells us what types of photography you are interested in & how much you know about the basic rules of photography. Canon has a pretty deep line up of bodies & some are aimed at action while others favor landscape or low light etc.
02-09-2015 11:00 AM - edited 02-09-2015 11:02 AM
Adapters are usually never a good idea.
How did you wind up with a Canon EF70-200 f/2.8L IS II USM lens and a Nikon body? This is a very good (the best) and very expensive lens.
02-09-2015 12:02 PM
02-09-2015 12:19 PM
@star wrote:
cicopo, she would use this lens for a wide variety of uses. Trade Shows indoor as well as outdoor. I'be seen this lens a few times and was truly impressed...so I bought it for her thinking lens were " universal" in there fitment ? Please keep in mind my knowledge of cameras is as follows...my Note 4 has an awesome 16 Meg camera, best I've ever had. See where I'm coming from... 😉
Wow. I'm blown away that people buy $2000 lenses with little to no understanding of the uses and requirements.
As mentioned above, it's probably the best lens in it's class (out of all manufacturers) and one of the best all around lenses made. It's incredibly sharp and has terrific autofocus capabilities - when paired to a Canon camera. 70-200 is telephoto range, or "zoomed" for non technical jargon. You can shoot a half body portrait in a medium sized room, zoom into someone across the street (a reasonable amount), or (probably it's biggest use) get in close from across the room like in event shooting.
What type of shooting you do matters on the camera body you choose. The most common choices at the moment for a lens of that caliber would be:
In general, if you're worried about getting things that are moving you'd get the 7d2, if you're worried about taking clean pictures in low light you'd get the 6D, and if you want both and have the budget you get the 5d3. As with an generalization, take it with a grain of salt.
02-09-2015 12:10 PM
02-09-2015 12:13 PM
A 70D and that lens will work fine.
02-09-2015 12:29 PM
@ebiggs1 wrote:A 70D and that lens will work fine.
A 7D Mark II will work even finer. Let's face it: any self-admitted newbie who can step out and buy his SO a $2000 lens without batting an eye isn't going to be put off by the $400 extra that it takes to get a camera that more nearly matches the lens's quality.
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