Zeiss Distagon T* 25mm f/2.8 ZF - Review / Test Report |
Lens Reviews -
Nikon / Nikkor (APS-C)
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Page 1 of 3
Review by Klaus Schroiff, published February 2007
Lens kindly provided for testing purposes by Peter-Cornelius Spaeth!
Introduction
The Zeiss Distagon T* 25mm f/2.8 ZF is another representative of the
recently introduced ZF line-up. Just like the recently reviewed
50mm f/1.4 it is a manual focus lens compatible to
the Nikon F(Ai-S)-mount (therefore ZF). On the APS-C DSLRs
its field-of-view is equivalent to 37.5mm so it behaves like a very
moderate wide-angle lens within this scope.
Typical for all ZF lenses the 25mm f/2.8 doesn´t feature AF nor an electronically
controlled aperture. Reads: the lens has an automatic aperture but you have
to stop down via the aperture ring on the lens (1/2 stop steps).
Consequently the lens is not compatible to the consumer-grade Nikon DSLRs a la
D40 or D70. However, it works just fine e.g. in aperture-priority mode on the
D200.
The build quality of the full-metal Zeiss (brass with chromium-plated brass
front bayonet) is superb. The fluted focus ring feels exceptionally
well damped. The lens extends when focusing towards shorter distances.
Specifications |
Equiv. focal length | 37.5 mm (full format equivalent) |
Equiv. aperture | f/4.2 (full format equivalent, in terms of depth-of-field) |
Optical construction | 10 elements in 8 groups |
Number of aperture blades | 9 |
min. focus distance | 0.17 m (max. magnification ratio 1:2.3) |
Dimensions | 65 mm x 90 mm |
Weight | 480 g |
Filter size | 58 mm (non-rotating) |
Hood | barrel shaped, metal, bayonet mount (supplied) |
Other features | - |
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