What are the best Nikon AF-D zoom lenses?

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trythis

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I gotta chime in for the one I like, that I can afford! It is the previously mentioned 28-105mm 3.5-4.5D. Its not VR or a 2.8 but the image quality has been excellent with very little distortion and very nice sharp images. A huge plus is how close it can focus at 28mm (not in macro mode!). A lot of cheaper and even more expensive lenses just cant focus close at the wide end. Its a little clunky getting in and out of Macro but the macro is actually a real macro 2:1. Its quite a bit heavier than the 28-80 3.3 5.6 which I think is also excellent and goes for peanuts probably because it feels like a toy.

I think I paid $100 for my 28-105 and $6 for my 28-80!
 

benveniste

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I expect that benveniste means to say that the lens shifts its physical length dramatically as the focal length changes.
Otherwise, an observation to the effect that the focal length changes when you change the focal length doesn't really add a lot to the conversation.

My error. What I meant to say was that focal length shifts dramatically with focus distance. (aka "focus breathing.)
 

BMbikerider

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RichardJack

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I agree with those who said the 80-200 AIS. The 17-35mm is also excellent, sharper than most of the primes in that range. Both of these are pricey. In the more affordable range the 28-105mm f3.5-4.5 AF-Dand 70-210 f4-f5.6 AF-D are great once stopped down to f8. An old favorite of mine was the 35-105 AIS, it was built like a tank and a great performer.
 

mshchem

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I've had bad luck with the AF-S silent wave motors breaking. I have a really nice 80-200 AF-D that I bought really cheap, not heavy nothing to go wrong, made by Nikon in Japan. I have a 20-35 AF-D great lens. Everything else I have is a fixed focal length. And every lens I have is fully compatible with my D3, D800 back to my F2A bodies as well as plain prism F. The stuff Nikon made in the 90s is better in many aspects than what is produced today.
 

Down Under

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I had two Zoom-Nikkors during my early film years (1970s-1980s) - the first was the hated 43-86 which produced unusual and interesting results with the old Ektachrome infrared film, but otherwise didn't satisfied, so I quickly disposed of it and have not missed it. Then the 80-200 f/2.8 which I loved but it cost me the price of a small planet in the universe and weighed as if made of Portland cement, so I sold it. I wish I had kept it, but money was tight in those otherwise good old days, and I had to bite many bullets to fund my photography.

Being somewhat old-fashioned in things photographic I stayed with Nikon primes until 2012, when I bought my first Nikon D700 and the retail shop offered me a well-used 28-85 D at a bargain price.

This bargain lens is surprisingly good and produces sharp images, so I now use it almost exclusively on one of my two D700s. It visibly distorts the horizontals and verticals at 28mm, but I get around this by shooting from 35mm upwards and stepping back a bit when framing architectural images. My results overall are, as already stated, nothing short of exceptional for a zoom. I have sold images taken with it and the published shots show just a little softness on two page spreads. For one to three column images which most publications use, everything is good and sharp, even without any sharpening in post processing (which I'm told media editors try to avoid anyway).

I now own several other Zoom-Nikkors, all purchased used except a late model 35-70 AF, which I bought unused and still in its sealed original packing at a flea market. Ditto a 70-210 D, which weighs a ton but produces acceptable results on the infrequent occasions I use it.

Somewhere in my camera box is a 35-105 D which I have never used. My partner's D90 has an excellent 18-55 G, the standard offering for DSLRs, which produces surprising work given its almost entirely plastic construction, so it has to be used with care.

Other than distortion, the technical aspects of a lens mean little to me. I rate them entirely on the results they give. To me, if a lens is an f/5.6, so be it. Macro function on zooms is wasted on me, as none I've owned (not even my legendary 28-85) has produced results I was happy with. For bee's tonsils and lovely close-ups of floral internals, I use my 60mm Micro Nikkor, but then I almost never shoot these subjects anyway. My partner does, with her 18-55, with generally pleasing results.

Interestingly, no Zoom-Nikkor has ever malfunctioned or failed on me. Nikon seems to build them to last. Well and good.

Other than the 18-55 which came with the D90 and so was (sort of) free, I paid A$100 for each zoom. It's amazing what a C-note can buy in older lenses in otherwise expensive Australia.
 

LeftCoastKid

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The old 'Trinity set' is very good; 17-35/2.8 28-70/2.8 80-200/2.8.

Not cheap in absolute terms though, about 2000$ for the set, but its good value.
+1. Stellar performers all! No hesitation whatsoever in using any of the three in lieu of primes within each of the respective ranges.
 

Sirius Glass

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I have used the Nikon 28mm to 200mm AF zoom lens and 28mm to 300mm AF zoom lens for years with great satisfaction. One might now consider the vibration stabilized version now.
 

macfred

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interesting; mine is a dog.

A pity to hear that, Ralph - my version ist heavy (700 gr) and very well (metal-) built; optical performance is great for me and many others (even professional photographers).
What's the problem with yours ? Are you sure you got the 35-70mm f/2.8 AF-D version (1992-2006)? Though the 35-70mm f/2.8 AF-S (1987-1992) was a fantastic lens too ...
 
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