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Buy the Canon 200-800 wildlife lens: http://SDP.io/C200800
Buy the Canon 100-500 wildlife lens: http://SDP.io/C100500
Buy the Canon 600mm f4 wildlife lens: http://SDP.io/RF600f4
Buy the Canon 1.4X Teleconverter: http://SDP.io/RF14
Buy the Sony 200-600 wildlife lens: http://SDP.io/S200600
Chelsea & Tony Northrup review the new Canon RF200-800mm F6.3-9 IS USM wildlife zoom lens against the closest competition: the existing Canon RF100-500mm L lens, which is INCREDIBLY sharp but kinda short. And with a teleconverter, the Canon 100-500mm lens produces amazing results BUT you lose the ability to zoom back, which is really weird.
They also compare it to the Sony 200-600mm wildlife lens, because that's what Chelsea uses for wildlife photography when she's in a kayak (paired with a Sony a1). While the 200-600 isn't as long, it's REALLY sharp, and even cropped it holds up really well. The Sony 200-600mm lens also has a superior internal zoom design, and it's quicker to zoom from the short to the long end.
Finally, they compare it to the best wildlife lens ever made: the $13,000 Canon 600mm f/4. Shockingly, the Canon 200-800mm wildlife lens does REALLY well in comparison! The sharpness is very similar when you have to crop to 800mm. However, if you add a teleconverter to the 600mm f/4, it produces much sharper results. The 600mm f4 also produces better results in lower-light conditions or when using a fast shutter speed - which you're often doing with wildlife photography.
0:00 Introduction
0:40 KEH Promo
1:21 Canon RF200-800 Handling & Design
2:08 Canon RF200-800 Focal Shrinking
2:31 Canon 100-500 vs Canon 200-800
4:32 KEH Promo
5:17 Sony 200-600 vs Canon 200-800
6:58 Canon 600mm f4 vs Canon 200-800
10:15 Summary