Sony has announced its 19th professional ‘GM’ lens in the shape of the FE 300mm F2.8 GM OSS. It’s the widest of three telephoto prime lenses with wide aperture – sitting below the FE 400mm F2.8 GM OSS and FE 600mm F2.8 GM OSS – and offers the kind of image quality and performance demanded by professional sports and wildlife photographers.
It is in fact the lightest 300mm f/2.8 lens around, weighing in at 51.9oz / 1,470g without the tripod collar. To put that in perspective a little, the Sony FE 400mm F2.8 lens is around twice the weight at 102.1oz / 2,895g.
I had some brief hands-on time with the lens ahead of its announcement, and it offers a lovely balance paired with the Sony A1 mirrorless camera (pictured below). A total weight of around 88oz / 2,500g is totally manageable to work with handheld for extended periods.
Sony FE 300mm F2.8 GM OSS price and release date
The Sony FE 300mm F2.8 GM OSS costs £5,800 in the UK, and is supplied with a lens hood, soft case and a new lens strap. It will be available from early 2024. At the time of writing we don’t have US or Australia pricing, or an exact release date, but we’ll update this article with those details as soon as we get them. It’s a high price for a high-quality lens, but very much in line with comparable DSLR lenses.
Whether you’re panning and tracking fast cars or erratic vertical movement with athletes, handheld shooting ensures the fastest possible response to the action, and the FE 300mm F2.8 is very much designed for handheld shooting. The lovely balance of camera and lens is aided by the lens’s optical construction, which places the majority of the lens elements at the rear of the lens in line with the tripod collar, which avoids the FE 300mm F2.8 being front-heavy.
This is the latest in a line of lighter-than-ever lenses from Sony (though at 265mm in length it’s not the shortest of its kind), but naturally there’s more to the 300mm F2.8 than its world-beating weight.
A complex lens structure comprising 20 elements in 16 groups, with Sony’s best Nano AR II coating, renders the kind of image quality that pros demand, with the MTF charts I saw displaying edge-to-edge clarity. In other words, you can crop into the edge of a picture and enjoy the same kind of image sharpness as in the very centre.
There are 11 blades forming a circular aperture at the maximum f/2.8 setting, so bokeh should appear lovely and round, though I’ll know more after shooting some pictures.