Interested to know how and why?I was hoping to get a set of the Zeiss, but now I'm very hesitant. Any contrary opinions, please?
Google "Ken Rockwell" and go to Zeiss ZF lenses.Interested to know how and why?
Can you bring quotation and link?
Thanks.
Just my opinion, but I think most top-brand lenses are so good that you need careful testing to see differences.
You won't see a difference between different manufacturers unless you're following a careful procedure to test the lenses for resolution, contrast, color, or whatever attributes are important to you..
Just my opinion, but I think most top-brand lenses are so good that you need careful testing to see differences.
You won't see a difference between different manufacturers unless you're following a careful procedure to test the lenses for resolution, contrast, color, or whatever attributes are important to you.
How often do you use a tripod, lock the mirror up, use a cable release, and select the optimal aperture for resolution? Which films will you be using? How large will the final images be and from what distance will they be viewed?
When I wanted to test my Hasselblad (Carl Zeiss) lenses, I used a tripod, pre-released the camera to bring the mirror and rear baffles up, used a cable release, an aperture of f/8, Kodak Technical Pan film, and enlarged to a 16x20 print.
I made some nice photos, but 99.9% of the time I don't make photos that way.
I completely agree. Each of the major players (Pentax, Nikon, Canon, Minolta, Olympus, Leica, Tokina, and even Cosina, etc) have some crummy optics and many pretty darned good optics and a few really excellent optics. Most of those in these latter "Good" categories are all so good that the differences come down to personal taste.
So, as others have said...
1) You have to determine what set of parameters are important to you and compare specific lens to specific lens
2) take what Rockwell says with a grain of salt. Yes, he does occasionally do real testing and my sense is that he used to do more testing and more meaningful testing when he still had his day job but since the web site became his job, he's just trying to drive traffic to his site and selling advertising. That said...
3) Rockwell's statement probably cannot be said to be false. Zeiss ZF lenses are probably not any better on average than Nikon....even if by completely objective measures, it is still based upon what set of parameters are most important to him. Does he supply data? Does he say what characteristics he's evaluating and how they are being weighted? What he values may not be what everybody else values.
And all that said, yes, of course, Nikon glass is better than Cosina glass....sheesh!![]()
I was hoping to get a set of the Zeiss, but now I'm very hesitant. Any contrary opinions, please?
You won't see a difference between different manufacturers unless you're following a careful procedure to test the lenses for resolution, contrast, color, or whatever attributes are important to you.
How often do you use a tripod, lock the mirror up, use a cable release, and select the optimal aperture for resolution? Which films will you be using? How large will the final images be and from what distance will they be viewed?
When I wanted to test my Hasselblad (Carl Zeiss) lenses, I used a tripod, pre-released the camera to bring the mirror and rear baffles up, used a cable release, an aperture of f/8, Kodak Technical Pan film, and enlarged to a 16x20 print.
I made some nice photos, but 99.9% of the time I don't make photos that way.
save your money;Nikkors are hard to top.I was hoping to get a set of the Zeiss, but now I'm very hesitant. Any contrary opinions, please?
Just out of interest, at what point and in whatever terms you care to specify will the Zeiss lens have a clear and noticeable edge over the Nikkors such that most viewers would be able to see the difference in the print? Yes I have read all the posts and I appreciate opinion will be divided on such matters but I am simply looking for information on known or demonstrable differences of the kind that most people could appreciate.
Ken Rockwell is a writer, and a prolific one, not a photographer. There is a difference.
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