Horatio
Subscriber
Title says it all. Mr. Rockwell does not like the missing aperture rings, but how do they compare optically to older AF Nikkors?
... how do they compare optically to older AF Nikkors?
I take what Rockwell says with about 1/10th of a grain of salt. Always have. Bout the only thing his site is good for is nice pictures, and specifications in a hurry.
I've been searching Flickr for images from lenses of interest. That tells me a lot about IQ, but nothing regarding build quality, durability, etc. Some info on specs is useful. I think his opinion of the G series lack of aperture ring has merit, but if you're only shooting on DSLRs what difference does it make?
I have a couple. Most are meh but the 18-55 f 3.5-5.6 kit lens is a real surprise. Tack sharp and versatile. Took this hand held with my D3100.
I have a couple. Most are meh but the 18-55 f 3.5-5.6 kit lens is a real surprise. Tack sharp and versatile. Took this hand held with my D3100.
The 18-55 is a crop sensor lens for a digital camera, so it will not work well on a 35mm film camera.
The 18-55 is a crop sensor lens for a digital camera, so it will not work well on a 35mm film camera.
Actually it doesn't vignette unless you use 18MM. It works on my F5 well at other focal lengths.
I have all kinds of fancy antique lenses and cameras, but the Nikkor 50mm 1.8G combined with the almost-all Plastic N75 SLR has perfect, fast and accurate autofocus, perfect matrix-metered autoexposure, and near perfect image quality at all apertures. The 50 1.8G is one of the best lenses I own, and on the N75 it is one of the lightest 35mm cameras. It's just about the only setup that challenges medium format for me because all the automation increases the keeper rate in situations where speed is of the essence. I don't find it as satisfying to shoot for slow and methodical conditions, or landscapes. That said, it has produced some of my favorite pictures because I just "have" the camera around when the opportunity strikes and the lens is superb in sharpness and the modern coatings really do have a leg-up on the vintage stuff as much as I hate to admit it. Here are two pictures I took with this combo that I am proud of:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/132764966@N03/51095588601/in/dateposted-public/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/132764966@N03/51095684262/in/dateposted-public/
And one not so sharp picture that I really like nonetheless. I believe the film for all of these was Fuji C200, may it live forever! They were DSLR scanned and color converted in negative lab pro.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/132764966@N03/51096139583/in/dateposted-public/
Nikkors rrarely disappoint.Title says it all. Mr. Rockwell does not like the missing aperture rings, but how do they compare optically to older AF Nikkors?
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