I have been doing some testing of zoom lenses, using MTF slanted edge tests. I like to test and quantify performance myself and have been comparing 1980's manual zooms, and used a modern Pentax DA 18-55 for reference. Previously I posted to APUG about comparing Pentax to Olympus, in particular the fabled MIJ 50 vs the Pentax M 1.7 50, where I found the MIJ was not all that its claimed to be. Similarly, in summary here, the 1983 Vivitar S1 28-90 is sharper than the modern Pentax 18-55, particularly at the wide end where the difference is substantial.
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Lots of whats written on the internet about lenses is nonsense. Potentially even this post. I like Photrio/APUG as it seems full of photographers with hands on experience, with little tolerance of stuff that doesn't make sense or isn't true.
Post 98: "Your "door stop" remark then wasn't made from any personal experience or deep knowledge of using zoom lenses, but purely out of prejudice and your ignorance of their capabilitys"
Similarly in post 106: "Sometimes guys just repeat things they Hear/Read so they seem like they agree with all the other experts"
Post 100: "Why don't you just shoot with a pinhole camera?"
It strikes me as happening a lot on the internet, people feel free to post stuff which is just shot from the hip. Then others start regurgitating it, and it somehow gains credibility as it remains unchallenged as if the ultimate truth.
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In post 20 there was written:
"The difference between most 40 year old zoom lenses and most modern zoom lenses come down to computers - computer aided design and computer aided manufacture. The computer made it possible to design and manufacture at much higher quality, for reasonable cost...."
I don't dispute the computer aided design improved design, but when did this start to materialise in a commercial consumer zoom lens? I would pinpoint the year as being 1983, for normal zooms. By 1983, there were zooms being produced which are sharper than zooms today. For example, the Vivitar Series 1 28-90 is substantially sharper than my current Pentax DA 18-55 kit zoom. Admittedly, I am comparing a top end zoom from 1983 with a current kit zoom.
I think this is a reflection of the 'minimum viable product' philosophy; that the current DA 18-55 is designed to maintain an affordable entry point for a new comer to photography, it is designed to only meet the lower quality requirement. I note that in testing over on other sites, the DA 18-55 is regarded as being one of the best kit zooms.
This consideration of what is good enough was captured in post 88 "Note in this example the design is "good enough" to meet the requirement without providing unnecessary performance: Over-designing can be as disastrous as under-designing".
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In post 49, there is the claim that version 2 of the Vivitar Series 1 70-210 zooms is the 'best'. This is an ambiguous statement, as the definition of best is not clear. By what criteria is that pronounced? A lot is written about the Vivitar Series 1 70-210 zooms. Once you start designing some MTF testing, it becomes clear that testing will requires many photos to be taken. You have various important variables such as f-stop, focal length and test distance. You could potentially have to evaluate a lens by processing 100 different images. Also, the testing needs to be across the frame. Using MTF Mapper, something like 1300 slanted edges are evaluated with each capture. This is where computers are better than humans. Obviously, the 1300 edges are then aggregated, getting summary stats like means and standard deviations of contrast for a given resolution.
In my testing, I looked at the long zooms including the first 3 Vivitar Series 1 70-210 zooms, the two Tamron SP 70-210 zooms, Kiron's 70-210 f4 zoom, Kiron 80-200 f4, Kiron 70-150, Pentax M 75-150, Pentax M 80-200. I also included a Tamron 278D 80-210 and Pentax F 80-200. Having measured them, I think all the Vivitar Series 1 70-210 zooms are great. You cannot really go wrong with any of them. The Kiron made 70-210 has prime like performance at 100mm. The Kiron 70-150 was the best performer at 70mm. The Tamron 278D was amazing at f8 135mm, but awful when opened wider than f8. I wonder whether the resolution I saw from the Tamron 278D was due to it having a massive lens hood.
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On zooms performance relative to primes, it really varies according to focal length and f stop. I was very surprised that the performance of the zooms can be on a par with the primes once stopped down to f8/f11, or even exceed a prime. This was contrary to what I had read previously and common internet lore. The difference was most noticeable at the long end, ie 135 or 200mm some zooms are sharper than my primes, notably the Tamron SP 19AH. If you are looking at the ultimate performance, resolution limit of the lenses, then the primes probably have it (on average across f stops or across the frame), but its a very close run thing, and in usage something I dont think you would notice. I was seeing all the good lenses reaching up to 60-70 lpmm for MTF25. At this level of resolution, it really matters whether its mounted on a tripod. Anthing hand held and the motion from the camera will mean the difference in the lens performance cannot be seen.