photo:olympuszd50-200mm
Table of Contents
Olympus ZD 50-200mm f/2.8-3.5 lens
see also:
introduction
- a unique telephoto zoom lens for Olympus Four Thirds dSLR system offering field of view of a 100-400mm zoom lens combined with weatherproofing, wide aperture and relatively compact and light size for such a range, plus one gets close focus capability not available on comparable Canon or Nikon lenses.
- this is one of my favorite lenses
- unfortunately it is not designed for contrast-detect AF thus when used on current Micro Four Thirds system cameras, AF in bright light takes 3-6secs. Olympus has addressed AF speed with the Olympus OM-D E-M1 having phase detection AF.
- most users would now be better off buying the smaller, lighter, CDAF-optimized Olympus mZD 40-150mm f/2.8 pro lens although you don't get as much telephoto reach and there is no 2x teleconverter for this new lens as yet
non-SWD original version
- Olympus macro flashes can be attached via the bayonet method
- nice lens but some vignetting wide open; good bokeh; ~$A1400;
- 1.07kg; 67mm filter; close focus 1.2m;
SWD version
- no longer allows the macro flash to be attached
- see compatibility
- similar to older model but adds faster SWD autofocus and improves color blur property
- 157mm x 87mm / 6.2 in. x 3.4 in. (extends to ~225mm)
- 1.07kg / 2.4 lb (with tripod plate)
- filter 67mm
- focusing is internal, and the filter thread does not rotate on focus
- 16 elements in 15 groups, including 3 ED elements
- 7 rounded blades
- close focus to 1.2m giving 1:2 macro
- matches beautifully with either the TC-14 or TC-20 teleconverters
- RRP $A1599
comparison with Canon or Nikon lenses
Olympus ZD 50-200mm SWD | Canon 70-200mm f/2.8 IS L | Canon 100-400mm L IS | Nikkor 80-400mm VR | Nikkor 200-400mm VR | Canon 70-300mm DO IS | Olympus ZD 90-250mm f/2.8 | |
focal length reach in 35mm terms | 100-400mm | 70-200mm FF 91-260mm 1D 112-320mm APS-C | 100-400mm FF 130-520mm 1D | 80-400mm FF 120-600mm DX | 200-400mm FF 300-600mm DX | 70-300mm FF 91-390mm 1D 112-480mm APS-C | 180-500mm |
aperture | f/2.8-3.5 | f/2.8 | f/4.5-5.6 | f/4.5-5.6 | f/4 | f/4-5.6 | f/2.8 |
weight | 1kg w/o tripod mount | 1.57kg | 1.36kg | 1.36kg | 3.275kg | 0.72kg | 3.27kg |
length | 157mm | 197mm | 189mm | 171mm | 358mm | 100mm | 276mm |
filter size | 67mm | 77mm | 77mm | 77mm | 52mm rear | 58mm | 105mm |
color | black | white | white | black | black | black | black |
close focus | 1.2m (0.42x macro) | 1.4m | 1.8m | 2.3m | 2m | 1.4m | 2.5m |
weatherproof | yes | yes | yes | no? | yes | no | yes |
aperture blades | 9 circular | 8 | 8 | 6 circular | 9 circular | ||
internal focus | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | ||
zoom mechanism | rotate, lens extends on zoom | rotate | push-pull | rotate | rotate | rotate | rotate |
RRP 2008 | $A1599 | $A3395 | $A3979 | $A2470 | $A2299 | ||
dSLR max. ISO cw 4/3 | 0EV | +1EV full frame | +1EV full frame | +1EV full frame | +1EV full frame | +1EV full frame | 0EV |
image stabiliser | 5 axis 4-5EV | optical 2-3EV | optical 2-3EV | optical 3EV | optical 2-3EV | optical 2-3EV | 5 axis 4-5EV |
will it fit mounted to pro camera in a 24cm deep shoulder bag? | YES | NO needs 28cm deep bag | No needs 27cm deep bag | No needs 25cm bag | NO CHANCE, needs 43cm deep bag | YES, easily, but this is only a f/5.6 lens | No chance, needs 35cm deep bag |
AF at max. telephoto with 1.4x TC? | YES, = 560mm f/4.9 | YES, f/4.0 | maybe, f/8 but image quality? | maybe, f/8 but image quality? | YES, f/5.6 | maybe, f/8 but image quality? | YES, f/4.0 |
AF at max. telephoto with 2.0x TC? | YES, = 800mm f/7, hand-holdable at 1/200th sec | YES 640mm f/5.6 on APS-C but image quality? | No | No | maybe f/8 but image quality? | No | YES =1000mm f/5.6 |
reviews
-
- “a fast and robust telephoto zoom lens”
- “With the lens attached to an Olympus E-5 camera body, focusing is extremely fast and, thanks to the Supersonic Wave Drive auto-focus motor built into the lens, essentially silent too”
- “Lateral chromatic aberrations, typically seen as coloured fringes along contrasty edges, are a non-issue with this lens. A truly exceptional performance!”
- “some light fall off especially at 100mm”
- “Build quality is outstanding, with a solid construction and superb fit and finish. It's also very good in the optical department, showing pretty consistent sharpness results across most of its aperture range”
-
- “only slight distortions throughout the range. It shows a bit of barrel distortion at 50mm changing to slight pincushion distortions from 100mm onwards”
- “vignetting of ~0.8EV in the 100-200mm range which can be visible in critical scenes. Stopping down by 1 f-stop solves the problem. At 50mm vignetting is a non issue”
- “produced very convincing resolution results in the MTF lab. At 50mm the quality is next to perfect across the frame. At 100m the center performance remains excellent from f/2.8 all the way up to f/8 whereas the border quality decreases slightly. It's impressive that the Zuiko is capable of keeping the center performance on very high levels at 150mm and 200mm. The borders suffer a bit more but stay on a very good rating even wide open”
- “Lateral chromatic aberrations (color shadows at hard contrast transitions) are very well controlled - less than 1px”
- “bokeh is variable depending upon the background but in critical backgrounds can get a touch nervous” - “but this occurs with most other comparable zoom lenses as well”
- “build quality of the Zuiko is exceptional”
- “All in all a highly desirable lens”
photo/olympuszd50-200mm.txt · Last modified: 2018/05/05 09:27 by gary1