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Sony FE 20-70mm F4 G Review

Dustin Abbott

August 27th, 2023

I was in a press briefing regarding this lens when the Sony rep said something that resonated with me.  He noted with today’s high resolution bodies (I currently do my Sony reviews on the 61MP a7RV body) that getting length is relatively easy – just crop.  But going wider is a different story.  So Sony is going wider with their most recent standard zoom.  Whereas the typical zoom range is 24-70mm, Sony is going that extra bit wider with the FE 20-70mm F4 G lens, which is just enough to make this a very unique lens – a hybrid wide angle/standard zoom.  The difference between 20 and 24mm is significant for landscape work.  Look at how much more of the building is visible in this comparison:

That can make an even more dramatic difference indoors, allowing you to include a lot more in the frame.

Perhaps most importantly for many photographers, the new 20-70G (as we’ll call it for brevity in this review) goes wide enough that it can serve as the wide angle lens for many photographers, meaning that they need to spend the money on one less lens.  Pairing the 20-70mm F4 with the amazing new 70-200mm F4 Macro G OSS II (my review here) would make for a lightweight, killer combo of lenses with near perfect image quality over what amounts to a 10x zoom ratio.  That’s pretty tempting.  The new 20-70G also makes for a unique travel lens, capable of giving you really wide results:

…but also the ability to zoom in and capture more details, like this:

That zoom ability makes it a reasonable portrait lens (though F4 isn’t exactly a dramatic maximum aperture), delivering crisp results with nice color and decent background blur.

There’s a lot here to attract photographers, particularly since the price point isn’t ridiculous (about $1100 USD).  Are there any hidden fatal flaws here that should keep you from choosing this lens?  You can judge for yourself by either watching my video review below or reading on to get the full picture.

 

Follow Me @ YouTube | Patreon |  Instagram | Facebook | DA Merchandise | Flickr | 500px

Thanks to Sony USA for sending me a review loaner of this lens. As always, this is a completely independent review. *The tests and most of the photos that I share as a part of my review cycle have been done with the Sony a7RV along with the Sony Alpha 1 that serve as my benchmark cameras for Sony lenses.

Sony 20-70G Build and Handling

Sony has managed to increase the zoom ratio here without dramatically increasing the size of the lens.  While there is no direct analog for this lens, the much older 24-70mm F4 Zeiss lens is slightly smaller and lighter, but dramatically so.  The F4 aperture of the 20-70G ensures that it is significantly smaller and lighter than the 24-70mm F2.8 GM II or competing 24-70mm F2.8 lenses.  Tamron’s 20-40mm F2.8 VXD lens is as wide, but obviously lacks a lot of the standard zoom range.  Here’s a look at how a few options compare:

The Sony 20-70G is relatively compact and is roughly the same size as my Sony FE 50mm F1.4 GM – the closest size comparison I had.  

The diameter of the lens is about 78.7mm (3.1″) and is 99mm (3.9″) in length.  The weight is 488g or 17.2oz.  The front filter thread is 72mm. 

This is not an internally zooming lens as the inner barrel extends about 4cm when zoomed to 70mm.

The zoom action is smooth and well damped and the lens doesn’t seem to show any tendency towards zoom creep.  This is good, as there isn’t a zoom lock on the lens.

Sony’s lenses have become increasingly feature rich in recent years, and that’s true here as well. That begins with a wide range of options for aperture control.  This includes an aperture ring that can be used “clicked” with one-third-stop detents throughout the range from F4 to F22 or can be switched into auto for in-camera control.  The aperture ring is thin but not difficult to find.  The detents are on the firm side when in the clicked mode; you definitely feel each one of them.

There is also an option to declick the aperture on the right side of the lens.  This allows the aperture ring to smoothly move through the aperture options and also allows for smooth aperture racks in video (though there is a bit of lag between ring input and the movement of the blades).

This particular switch is a little difficult to access as it is located on the bevel towards the lens mount.  There isn’t a lot of room between the switch and the grip when the lens is mounted on the camera, and its position makes the ergonomics of reaching it difficult.  Fortunately this is not a switch that most people will be reaching for often, so I don’t think it is a deal breaker.  

On the opposite side there is an Iris Lock switch that will either lock you into the manual ring (if you don’t want to inadvertently move into automatic) or lock you into automatic if you aren’t an aperture ring person.

There are 9 aperture blades that help keep the aperture shape circular when stopped down.  

On the left side of the lens there is an AF/MF switch along with a focus hold button (which can be programmed to a variety of functions from within the camera).  There is a secondary focus hold button on the top of the lens which will be accessible when shooting in portrait orientation.

The minimum focus distances is 25cm (9.8″) and gives a very high 0.39x magnification.

The plane of focus isn’t perfectly flat, but there is good detail in the focus area.  This will allow you to get very close and get some macro(ish) shots, like this shot of one of my honeybees:

That’s also very handy for video, as autofocus will continue right up until you are essentially on top of your subject.

This is thoroughly weather sealed lens, with roughly 14 seal points along with fluorine coatings on the front element.

That was particularly useful for me when shooting in the Mayan Riviera in Mexico, as the high heat and humidity means that everything immediately fogs up when coming out of an air conditioned environment.  Weather sealing helps assure that there won’t be moisture inside that could produce mold or fungus over time.  

The lens hood is petal-shaped and not particularly deep.    There is no lock, but it bayonets on tightly and didn’t move.

Other than the ergonomic issues accessing a few of the minor switches, the lens handles very nicely and is a nice, compact fit on Sony’s full frame cameras.

Sony 20-70mm F4 Autofocus Performance

Sony has employed dual XD (extreme dynamic) Linear Motors to assure that autofocus is fast, quiet, and accurate.  This is something that Sony has really perfected, as they use the appropriate number of XD motors and assure that autofocus is pretty much flawless.

This allowed me to nail focus in quick, reactionary situations, like this pelican coming in to knock a gull of its perch.  My shutter speed was low for this kind of action (unexpected), but the focus was flawless and I actually like the dynamic result from the panning movement and shutter dragging here.

Getting eye focus on traditional subjects was easy, obviously.  Here’s a shot of me and my new daughter-in-law:

Portrait and wedding photography will be a breeze with this lens and a decent camera body.  Here’s the venue my son chose to be married at (you might recognize this location as one where the X-Men movies were filmed):

I came across a boa while out with the lens in Mexico, and, as you can see, focus was nailed on the eye:

The newest Sony cameras like the a7RV have insect detection mode, and that works nicely for nailing focus on one of my honeybees.

On the video front, video pulls are quick, quiet, and confident as you might expect with a first party Sony lens equipped with dual focus motors.  There is a tiny amount of focus breathing.  When I tested it on the a7RV and turned on the “Focus Breathing Compensation” setting there is a mild improvement and at very little crop because of the low amount of breathing to begin with.  The lens also performed well (as expected) in my “hand test”, quickly transitioning back to tracking my eye after I blocked visibility of my eyes with my hand towards the lens.  

My general focus results were excellent.  I had zero issues either during stills or video focus:

Bottom line is that the autofocus is excellent.

Sony SEL2470G II Image Quality

At this stage I have come to expect that Sony’s new lens releases are typically going to be pretty fantastic optically, and that is definitely the case here.  The MTF results show extremely sharp results at 20mm and with slightly poorer results at 70mm, though when stopped down the image quality is pretty much perfect at any point.

Image quality is pretty much pristine:

Longitudinal chromatic aberrations (LoCA) typically show up as purple/magenta fringing before the plane of focus and blue/green fringing beyond the plane of focus due to colors not being perfectly focused together.  They typically diminish as the lens is stopped down to smaller apertures.  I didn’t see any real world LoCA, though that wasn’t unexpected in a lens with a wider focal range and smaller maximum aperture.  A lens like this would be more likely to suffer with Lateral chromatic aberrations (LaCA) that show up as fringing on either side of contrast areas (like tree trunks, for example) along the edges of the frame.  Unlike LoCA, they do not improve when stopping the aperture down, but are much easier to correct for (typically a one click “remove chromatic aberrations” box in editing software).  We can see once again that there is no evidence of any fringing near the edges of the frame. 

So that is great, but there is at least one ugly monster hiding behind the lens corrections…distortion.  The barrel distortion at 20mm is extremely strong and is also very non-linear.

You can see a fairly pronounced amount of wave (mustache pattern) after a manual correction.  I had to use a +50 correct the distortion (one of the higher values I’ve ever entered), though vignette was fairly mild at just a +20 to correct.  Fortunately the correction profile does a cleaner job of correcting the distortion, though you can see that there is some mild barrel distortion that remains even after the correction profile.

The correction profile makes the lens usable in most situations, though this probably won’t be a great choice for doing real estate work.  For most lines, however, I didn’t notice the distortion until I specifically tested for it.

At 70mm there is a mild amount of pincushion distortion (-8 to correct) that is linear and easy to correct.  Vignette remains low at just a +29 to correct.

The correction profile will obviously make sure you never see any distortion at 70mm.

So, the barrel distortion at 20mm is strong, but we’ve otherwise got a good performance.

So how about sharpness?  I’ve used the very high resolution (61MP) Sony a7RV for this series of tests, which obviously sets an exacting standard for sharpness and contrast.  Here’s a look at the test chart:

And here are the 20mm F4 crops at about 200% magnification, taken from the center, then mid-frame, and then extreme lower right corner:

This is a lens that handles the 61MP resolution point over most of the frame without issue at F4.  The far corners are a bit softer, but the performance in the center and mid-frame is extremely good.

At 100% magnification and with real world subjects detail looked good all across the frame at 20mm:

Stopping down to F5.6 helps the corners, though they are sharpest at F8:

F11 is just very slightly less sharp due to diffraction, with increased softening at F16 and then at F22.  You can see a pretty radical difference between F4 and F22:

Sharpness improves a bit more at 24mm, with slightly stronger results all across the frame (including the corners).

Here’s a real world shot at 24mm:

The performance at 35mm is nearly identical to that at 24mm, which is to say, excellent.  Here’s a shot of the sargassum that the ocean constantly delivers to Cancun in August:

50mm is again virtually identical, with extreme sharpness in the center and mid-frame and a dip in the corners.  Here’s a 50mm shot:

Contrary to the MTF charts, the copy I tested actually performed the best at 70mm.  I saw the best sharpness across the frame, with a stronger performance in the corners than at any other point.  Take a look at the edge performance here:

Real world results look great.  This nearly 100% crop from a shot of my wife shows excellent detail even at F4:

This F5.6 landscape shot shows great detail everywhere in the frame:

Bottom line is that image quality is excellent, though the corners sometimes need a mild stop down to be excellent.

Contrast and colors were excellent, with nice saturation levels and good “pop” to the images.

Here’s a shot with a wide range of different colors:

Here’s another that looks pretty fantastic.

Flare resistance is quite good, particularly at wider apertures.

I could see a few more ghosting artifacts if shooting at a smaller aperture like F11, but not bad.

Sunbursts are good but not great.  The blades of the sunburst lack definition, but look generally okay.

A lens with a maximum aperture of F4 and maximum focal length of 70mm is not going to strongly blur out backgrounds, but the quality of the bokeh is generally fairly good.

Your best case scenario for creating bokeh will be when you can get close to your subject and have a bit of distance to the background.

A lens like this excels more at having more in focus and delivering great detail throughout.  I liked it for travel, though I also took along a compact prime with a larger maximum aperture for when I wanted to get some shots with a shallower depth of field.  In general, however, image quality is pretty great!

If you would like to see more images, check out my image gallery here.

 

Conclusion

That extra 4mm may not seem like much, but for some shooters it will transform this lens from “ho-hum” to “wow!”  It makes it far more useful for travel, weddings, and landscape work, as it means you could carry just this one lens rather than a wide angle and a standard zoom zoom.  It’s a killer landscape lens:

The strong distortion at 20mm makes me less likely to suggest it for interior/real estate work, but lines were generally good enough for most other applications.

I really enjoyed this lens as a travel lens for capturing both photos and video.  It doesn’t have OSS (Optical Steady Shot), but the excellent IBIS in Sony’s recent cameras like the a7RV make this pretty much a moot point.  The Sony FE 20-70mm F4 G has a nice build, excellent autofocus, and overall excellent image quality.  It’s a great package at a price point of right under $1100 USD, and should be the perfect lens for those less concerned with low light performance or shallow depth of field and who instead want flexibility in their zoom range while retaining very high image quality.  By that metric the 20-70G really excels.  This is the kind of lens that only comes along when a company has a full catalog of lenses and can afford to get a little more creative in lens design.  It’s a great time to be a Sony shooter!

Pros:

  • Wider than any standard zoom before it
  • Compact size
  • Beautifully built and well sealed
  • Feature rich
  • Extremely fast and accurate autofocus
  • Very low focus breathing
  • Extremely sharp in the center and midframe throughout the zoom range
  • Very low vignette
  • Beautiful color
  • Mostly good flare resistance
  • Low aberrations

Cons:

  • Very strong barrel distortion at 20mm
  • Declick switch is difficult to access
  • Corner performance wide open at some focal lengths not exceptional

 

Purchase the Sony 20-70mm F4 G & B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Sony Canada | Amazon Canada  | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony 70-200mm F4 Macro G II @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada  | Sony Canada  | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony a7RV @ B&H Photo | AdoramaAmazon | Camera Canada | Sony Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony a7IV @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Sony Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony Alpha 1 @ Camera Canada | B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Sony Canada | Amazon CanadaAmazon UK | Amazon Germany | Ebay 

Purchase a Sony a9M2 @ B&H Photo | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany | Ebay 

 

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Keywords:  Sony, Sony 20-70mm, 20-70mm, F4, G,  Sony 20-70 G Review, FE 20-70mmmm F4, Sony FE 20-70mm F4 G, SEL2070G, Full Frame, Review, Sony Alpha 1, Sony a7IV, Sony a7RV, Review, Hands On, Dustin Abbott, Real World, Comparison, Sharpness, Bokeh, Flare Resistance, Autofocus, Image Quality, Sample Images, Video, Travel, Mexico, Cancun, Photography, let the light in, #letthelightin, DA, Weather Sealing

DISCLAIMER: This article and description contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Sony FE 20-70mm F4 G Image Gallery

Dustin Abbott

August 27th, 2023

I was in a press briefing regarding this lens when the Sony rep said something that resonated with me.  He noted with today’s high resolution bodies (I currently do my Sony reviews on the 61MP a7RV body) that getting length is relatively easy – just crop.  But going wider is a different story.  So Sony is going wider with their most recent standard zoom.  Whereas the typical zoom range is 24-70mm, Sony is going that extra bit wider with the FE 20-70mm F4 G lens, which is just enough to make this a very unique lens – a hybrid wide angle/standard zoom.  The difference between 20 and 24mm is significant for landscape work.  Look at how much more of the building is visible in this comparison:

That can make an even more dramatic difference indoors, allowing you to include a lot more in the frame.

Perhaps most importantly for many photographers, the new 20-70G (as we’ll call it for brevity in this review) goes wide enough that it can serve as the wide angle lens for many photographers, meaning that they need to spend the money on one less lens.  Pairing the 20-70mm F4 with the amazing new 70-200mm F4 Macro G OSS II (my review here) would make for a lightweight, killer combo of lenses with near perfect image quality over what amounts to a 10x zoom ratio.  That’s pretty tempting.  The new 20-70G also makes for a unique travel lens, capable of giving you really wide results:

…but also the ability to zoom in and capture more details, like this:

That zoom ability makes it a reasonable portrait lens (though F4 isn’t exactly a dramatic maximum aperture), delivering crisp results with nice color and decent background blur.

There’s a lot here to attract photographers, particularly since the price point isn’t ridiculous (about $1100 USD).  Are there any hidden fatal flaws here that should keep you from choosing this lens?  You can judge for yourself by either watching my video review below or reading the text review…or just enjoy the photos below.

 

Follow Me @ YouTube | Patreon |  Instagram | Facebook | DA Merchandise | Flickr | 500px

Thanks to Sony USA for sending me a review loaner of this lens. As always, this is a completely independent review. *The tests and most of the photos that I share as a part of my review cycle have been done with the Sony a7RV along with the Sony Alpha 1 that serve as my benchmark cameras for Sony lenses.

Photos of the Sony FE 20-70mm F4 G

Photos Taken with the Sony 20-70mm F4 G

Purchase the Sony 20-70mm F4 G & B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Sony Canada | Amazon Canada  | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony 70-200mm F4 Macro G II @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada  | Sony Canada  | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony a7RV @ B&H Photo | AdoramaAmazon | Camera Canada | Sony Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony a7IV @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Sony Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony Alpha 1 @ Camera Canada | B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Sony Canada | Amazon CanadaAmazon UK | Amazon Germany | Ebay 

Purchase a Sony a9M2 @ B&H Photo | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany | Ebay 

 

Want to support this channel? Use these affiliate links to shop at: B&H Photo | Amazon | Adorama | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Ebay | Make a donation via Paypal

Buy DA Merchandise https://bit.ly/TWIMerch

 

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Keywords:  Sony, Sony 20-70mm, 20-70mm, F4, G,  Sony 20-70 G Review, FE 20-70mmmm F4, Sony FE 20-70mm F4 G, SEL2070G, Full Frame, Review, Sony Alpha 1, Sony a7IV, Sony a7RV, Review, Hands On, Dustin Abbott, Real World, Comparison, Sharpness, Bokeh, Flare Resistance, Autofocus, Image Quality, Sample Images, Video, Travel, Mexico, Cancun, Photography, let the light in, #letthelightin, DA, Weather Sealing

DISCLAIMER: This article and description contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 E-Mount Review

Dustin Abbott

July 28th, 2023

8 months ago I gave a glowing review of the Fuji X-mount version of the Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2.   It was a stunningly good lens that managed to deliver next level improvements to the build and optics.  I knew then that a Sony E-mount version of the lens was inevitable, and it has finally arrived.  In what has become typical Viltrox fashion, it’s not the same lens ported over, however, but Viltrox has managed to deliver some key improvements that makes the Sony E-mount version even better than the Fuji version was.  This includes some new features like the ability to declick the aperture, a focus hold button, and their stylish new orange/red weather sealing gasket that they debuted on the amazing Viltrox AF 16mm F1.8 full frame lens (my review here). 

The Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 (hereafter referred to as the Pro 75E to distinguish the Sony version) is the first in their new series of “Pro” lenses, with a rumored 27mm F1.2 soon to follow.  The Pro series has a more upscale build and feature set along with truly premium options.  The Pro 75E is an APS-C lens, so the crop factor of the camera it is mounted on will affect its apparent aperture.   Sony’s E-mount has a crop factor of 1.5 which will make the lens behave something like 115mm on a full frame camera – a very, very intriguing focal length for portrait work, particularly with that extremely wide maximum aperture.  There isn’t really any true competition for this lens on Sony, as dedicated portrait telephoto lenses with fast maximum apertures for APS-C just haven’t existed.  You will love the Pro 75E; it has the ability to just crush backgrounds.

The only thing that held the Fuji version of the lens back was that the autofocus was only so-so (it has since been improved via firmware), but this new Sony version has the advantages of A) having had that additional development time to perfect the AF and B) the fact that Sony’s autofocus is better than Fuji’s at this point, particularly since my “APS-C” camera on Sony is the APS-C crop mode of the amazing Sony a7RV.  It’s 26MP in APS-C mode matches that of the new Sony a6700 but with the superior ergonomics and autofocus of Sony’s bigger full frame bodies. I was blown away with how much better autofocus was on the new Sony version, particularly with action sequences.  I could easily pick out a bird in flight at F1.2…and look at how amazing the results are! 

Viltrox claims near APO levels of correction for chromatic aberrations, which I’ve definitely verified to be true.  That’s extremely impressive in a lens with this wide of an aperture.  This Pro 75E has a tremendous amount of “bite” even at F1.2, and at its best the lens produces images that look much, much more expensive than the price tag suggests.

It seems absurd to say, but the last few lenses from Viltrox have left me with as much anticipation for their new releases as any brand out there, and part of that is that they continue to deliver incredible value.  The MSRP of the Pro 75E as it comes to market is $549USD (though if you buy it from the Viltrox store and use code DUSTINABBOTT you can get 10% any Viltrox product, including this lens), which makes this lens an absolute bargain relative to the performance.  The Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 in Sony E-mount isn’t quite perfect, but it is as about as close as it gets.   If you prefer to watch your reviews, you can check out my definitive video review…or just keep reading.

 

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Thanks to Viltrox for sending me an evaluation copy of the 75mm F1.2.   As always, this is a completely independent review. 

Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 Build and Handling

As noted in the intro, Viltrox is trying to move up into the next level of lens design, and that shows up here in the design and features of the AF 75mm F1.2.  The Fuji version of the lens was already a huge step up from previous Viltrox lenses, but the new Sony version is better still.  From one angle, the lenses look fairly similar, distinguished only by the slightly different badging and the fact that the lens mount alignment point is in a different place.

Rotate the lens to either side, however, and you’ll see the additional features of the Sony E-mount version:

That carries on to the bottom of the lens, where Viltrox has moved to their new eye-catching orange-red weather sealing gasket.

I like this move just like I liked when Zeiss did the same in Zeiss blue.  It feels stylish and unique, as if Viltrox is starting to develop their own identity.  That weather sealing isn’t just external, by the way; this is a thorough weather sealing, with nine seal points showing in the cutout diagram here:

This is  an internally focusing lens, so there is nothing that moves where dust might intrude. There’s also an HD-Nano multilayer coating on the front element to help with water and fingerprint resistance, making the front element easier to clean.  As always, however, “moisture-proof” does not mean “water-proof”, so don’t go crazy!

The focus hold button behaves in the same fashion as Sony lenses and is a welcome control point.  This puts the Pro 75E on equal footing with Sony’s more premium recent offerings on APS-C like the 15mm F1.4 G lens (my review here).  The declick option for the aperture ring is very welcome, as it does allow for smooth aperture racks, though, as usual, there’s a slight lag as the aperture iris motor reacts to feedback from the ring.

The lens has a beautiful 11 bladed aperture that keeps a wonderfully circular shape as you close it down.  You can see that even at F2.8 (2 1/3rds stop closed down) the aperture shape is nicely round.

There’s no getting around the fact that this is a very large lens that is, frankly, a better fit on my a7RV than it would be on the much smaller a6400 that I sold to help fund buying the a7RV!

It is 87mm/3.42″ in diameter (leaving a large but common 77mm front filter thread) and is 101mm/3.98″ in length – just like the Fuji version.  It weighs 675g or 23.8oz – just slightly heavier than the Fuji version, which makes sense, as the Sony mount is a bit larger than Fuji’s X-mount.  This is definitely a fairly large lens for APS-C.  I don’t find the lens particularly heavy, but my wife complained about the weight.  Your feelings on the weight of the lens will obviously have a lot to do with your tolerance for weight in lenses.  You can see that the Pro 75mm’s dwarf the Viltrox 56mm F1.4 in between them:

For me, personally, the performance of the lens makes the weight well worth it.

The design language is consistent with what I’ve seen from Viltrox recently, though now we have a “PRO” badge on the side rather than the “C” or “DF-RBW” that’s been on the side of some of their lenses.  Also new here is the AF/MF switch along with the focus hold button on the left side.  I always prefer having an AF/MF switch on the lens as the most direct and logical way to control that function.

There is a  “Viltrox” badge on the upper right side of the lens, and it feels like a nice balance to the Pro badge on the opposite side.  The Click/Declick switch on the Sony version is now beneath that badge.  

If you use the clicked version of the aperture you will find detents at each one third stop.  There is an “A’ position past F22 that will allow you to instead control aperture from within camera if you aren’t an aperture ring person.   Always lovely to see “F1.2” as an option on an aperture ring.

The manual focus ring is made of metal with tight ribbing.  It moves smoothly and with nice damping, though I felt like there was the slightly bit of “drag” from the focus motor.  I noticed a bit of stepping with the Fuji version, but that’s not the case here.  Focus is smooth and the image will automatically magnify to help visually confirm focus. 

Viltrox continues with a trend that other lens makers are now imitating by including a USB-C port in the lens mount that allows you to do firmware updates right to the lens.  I’m a fan of this approach, as it eliminates the need for a separate dock or lens station for firmware updates, and I find the process a little more intuitive than even doing firmware updates through the camera.  This allows Viltrox to future proof their lenses and continue to improve them through firmware.

There is no image stabilization, so you’ll have to rely on the stabilization from your camera body if it is so equipped.  The a7RV that I used for my review has great IBIS, so I had nice stable results in my tests.

If you look in the front of the lens, you’ll find a LOT of glass!

One lingering Viltrox weakness remains, and that is in minimum focus and maximum magnification performance.  MFD is 88cm (nearly 35″) and the resulting magnification is only 0.10x (is this the required magnification level for Viltrox lenses?)

On the plus side the up close performance is very strong even at F1.2, so there are still opportunities to get beautifully blurred out backgrounds, though it never seems you can get quite as close as what you would like.  

The lens hood is petal shaped and made of plastic.    Also included is a lens pouch with a padded leatherette bottom.

The only thing that anyone might object to in the build and handling department is the size of the Pro 75E.  It is otherwise pretty exceptional.

Viltrox Pro 75E Autofocus Performance

The Viltrox Pro 75mm is equipped with a Lead Screw-type STM (stepping motor), which is the better of the two different STM designs.  The challenge with a lens with such large elements is that they are heavier and thus require more torque to move.  I think the focus motor is the same on the Sony E-mount version, but it just performs better in general on Sony.  I was thoroughly impressed with the lens’ ability to quickly nail focus on birds on the wing, and the fast aperture options makes it easy to get high shutter speeds to freeze that action in place.

The Pro 75E seemed to work very nicely with the a7RV’s AI subject tracking, as I got amazingly well focused results on birds even when there was no visible eye available.

I was a little less successful with a lunging dog in the water because the splashes of water would sometimes confuse focus, but I certainly got some well focused results in my sequences despite that.  Here’s one at F1.2:

As you might imagine, taking photos of slower moving subjects was incredibly easy.  This cat was walking towards me, and I had no problem getting perfect focus on his eyes…and look at that background!

I purposely put some branches in the foreground when taking a “portrait” of this rooster, but as you can see that proved zero problem:

Here’s another from a little further

Depth of field was absolutely tiny when shooting across the table at my subject, but look at how well focused this shot is:

Likewise when further away focus was flawless at F1.2 (as was contrast…and color…and bokeh, but I get ahead of myself…)

This should work very well as a portrait lens (which should be the main reason to purchase one), and focus is now pretty much flawless for that application.  My wife took this shot at F1.2 of me on my birthday, and even with my eyes faced down, focus is flawless.

For stills, the autofocus on the Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 is, well, rather pro.

Video AF isn’t quite as good, though obviously improved from what I saw on Fuji.  Focus pulls were fairly good and smooth, but there was sometimes a little “bounce” where focus went a little too far on the initial focus rack and had to come back a fraction to lock.  I found focus transitions in video footage where I moved from one subject to another to be a little better…even at F1.2, where depth of field is very shallow.

My “hand test” where I test the transitions from my face to my hand was better.  There was more confidence with these more definite subjects, and I didn’t see any hunting.  Focus went confidently from my hand to my eyes and vice versa.  The focus pulls were smooth, but there is some obvious focus breathing that makes the transitions a little more jarring.  

In a static shot where focus just needed to stick with the action (like flowers or grasses blowing in the wind), I had perfect results.  I’ve also used the lens a few times for my YouTube video segments, and it tracked my eye perfectly with zero hunting during the extended clips.

I’ve saved one of my most amazing anecdotes until last.  The photo above probably doesn’t blow your mind, right?  But here’s what is amazing about it.  I saw some dragonflies buzzing around and wanted to take a photo of them, but the one that remained immediately flew up into a cedar.  I thought, “Now here is a real test!”.  I set the camera on “Insect Detection”, had the Viltrox at F1.2, and aimed it at the cedar and let the AF find the dragonfly.  Here’s a crop of that image above:

Is that not amazing?  Kudos to both Viltrox and Sony here.  I’m impressed!

Viltrox Pro 75mm F1.2 Image Quality

Viltrox has pulled out all the stops with this lens and has included a number of exotic elements in the optical construction (4 high-refractive elements and 3 Extra-low dispersion elements), leaving an MTF results that looks quite good at F1.2 and great when stopped down to F8 (this is the X-mount MTF chart, but the E-mount looks the same):

The Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 was one of the first lenses that I reviewed on the ultra-high resolution of the new Fuji 40MP APS-C sensors, and frankly it spoiled me a bit.  It gave me the false impression that lenses were going to be able to handle that tremendous pixel density (the equivalent of a full frame 90MP camera!) without issue.  I’ve reviewed 7 or 8 X-mount lenses on either the X-T5 or X-H2 since, and discovered that this is not at all the case.  Most lenses struggle to show good resolution at that high of a pixel count.  So I already knew that the Pro 75E would be exceptional, particularly considering that Sony doesn’t have any APS-C sensors with nearly as high of resolution.  The 26MP that I’m reviewing on here is as high as it gets.  The Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 handles this level of resolution with ease…even shooting landscapes at F1.2: 

A big part of what makes this lens so exceptional is that it provides effortless levels of contrast at any focus distance; it isn’t just “optimized” for a certain distance.  Some lenses practically demand that you shoot them in their “sweet spot” in order to get reasonable performance, but the Pro 75E can handle the infinity distance above as easily as it does extremely close results like this:

I chose the image above as it is a perfect opportunity for some chromatic aberrations.  High contrast edges with a fade towards edges that should be white.  Many previous Viltrox lenses struggled with chromatic aberrations (particularly longitudinal chromatic aberrations), but the Viltrox Pro 75mm showed almost no fringing to be found in either my formal tests or real world results.  Here’s a gull flying against a bright sky, shot at F1.2.  Note the crop and the complete absence of fringing.

Viltrox claims Apochromatic levels of chromatic aberrations, but without suggesting that this is an APO design.  I’m not quite sure how they are accomplishing it, but there’s something special going on here.

I’m also satisfied with the control of LaCA (lateral chromatic aberrations) that typically show up along the edges of the frame with high contrast transition points.  Here we can see that even at F8 there is essentially a perfect transition from black to white near the edge of my test chart.

I also found no fringing in real world images along the edges of the frame – nothing here but sharp, precise transitions in contrast.  You can see from this landscape image and its crop that there is no lateral fringing near the edges of the frame.

For those interested, the move to Sony has allowed us to evaluate how much of the full frame circle that the lens covers as E-mount is shared across both full frame and APS-C cameras.  For those hoping that this secretly a full frame lens, I’m afraid you’ll be disappointed.  Here’s how the full frame image circle looks like:

If I manually crop, I can get very slightly wider than the standard APS-C crop (bottom left), but not much wider:

If we move on to vignette and distortion we find mostly good news.  There is next to no distortion at all (I did no correction) and (in an emerging trend as I test more third party lenses on both Fuji and Sony), I see less vignette than I did on Fuji.  I needed a +55 to correct for the vignette.

In some images I definitely wanted the vignette corrected, but in others I found that a bit of vignette helped draw the eye to the subject and was part of the “look” of an image.

While there appeared to be some vignette correction on Fuji, I don’t think the same is true here.  I looked at JPEGs and the vignette appeared as uncorrected as it was in the RAW files.

Other than the vignette, the Viltrox AF Pro 75mm F1.2 STM has passed our early tests with flying colors.

We’ll move on to inspecting our test chart.  My formal tests were done on the APS-C mode of the Sony a7RV, which results in 26MP of resolution.  I use a high end tripod and two second camera delay to ensure vibration doesn’t affect images.  Here’s a look at the test chart that we will examine at high magnification:

If we take a look at crops (at about 170%) at F1.2 from the center, mid-frame, and lower right corner, we find that center and mid-frame performance is fantastic with the corners only lagging a little behind.

Even a very mild stop down to F1.4 starts to improve vignette and allow for even more contrast in the corners, which now look pretty excellent:

In real world results, detail looks pretty much perfect even at F1.2:

This shot of a rooster at F1.6 shows unbelievably good detail and contrast:

Obviously smaller apertures like F4-F8 will be pretty much perfect across the frame.

But what makes the Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 exceedingly rare is that it isn’t just very sharp; it also has lovely rendering.  The bokeh remains quite soft and attractive despite the very high level of detail and contrast.  At closer focus distances the F1.2 aperture and longer focal length has the ability to just completely melt away the background, making for beautiful images:

Move a little further away and more of the background is visible, but you’ve got a very 3D look to your subject that, frankly, looks a little Zeiss-like:

But even at further distances where the background is more obvious, it still melts away in such a way that the subject is allowed to pop:

Perhaps the only thing you could complain about is that the geometry has a fair bit of “cat-eye” look towards the edges of the frame, but it also gives a bit of a “swirl” effect that has been highly prized by a lot of photographers for its artistic look.

I guess the solution to the “cat-eye” bokeh is to just shoot images with “cat bokeh”:

In the past I haven’t found Viltrox color rendition to be top tier, but I think we’ve got an upgrade in the optical glass being used in this Pro series, as color rendition has been very pleasing to me.  

Skin tones also looked nice and natural.  Here’s another birthday shot of me with my birthday/Father’s Day gift – a new Milwaukee battery powered lawnmower (I’ll have a bit of content about it on my channel if you’re interested).

I found flare resistance to be fairly good for a lens with such a large maximum aperture.  In this F1.2 shot you can see that contrast has held up pretty well, that there is no light-induced fringing, and the only negative is a bit of a ghosting blob in the lower middle of the image.

If I just shoot at the midday sun at F11, I got a bit more of a ghosting pattern, but nothing extreme.

All told, the optical performance of the Viltrox Pro 75mm F1.2 is just fantastic. I’ve seen very few lenses designed for APS-C that are competing at this level, and none with this large of a maximum aperture.  Typically with F1.2 lenses you are dealing with a soft, dreamy look at F1.2 that only becomes crisp when stopped down a fair way, but Viltrox has managed to deliver beautiful optics from wide open.  Yes, the lens is big and heavy, but not so overwhelmingly so that it is unusable.  The image quality easily justifies the size, however.  This lens is incredible!  You can check out more photos by visiting the image gallery here.

Conclusion

The Viltrox AF Pro 75mm F1.2 STM is as welcome on Sony E-mount as it was on Fuji X-mount.  I really like this particular focal length, as it gives you more compression to backgrounds than the 56mm does but is short enough to be more flexible than either an 85mm or 90mm lens.  I’ve often wondered why more lens makers don’t make portrait oriented primes in the 100-110mm range, as I think this is a really great spot for portrait work.  There are very few lenses for Sony E-mount in this particular space, and fewer still that are purpose designed for APS-C.  Sony doesn’t make an APS-C prime longer than 50mm, and thus only covers this focal length with zooms that have a MUCH smaller maximum aperture.  There just aren’t any Sony-branded APS-C lenses that can make images like this:

That obviously makes this lens very valuable, and the fact that the autofocus on Sony is good enough to keep up with birds in flight (even at F1.2!) only adds to the value:

And finally, there is that value proposition.  At at price tag of $549 USD, this is a LOT of lens for the money.  It is priced extremely competitively relative to its performance, which, to me, makes this perhaps THE portrait lens of choice for Sony APS-C shooters.  It is also great for street, art prints, landscapes, and general subjects.  It’s pretty much good at everything.  So yes, I wholeheartedly recommend this lens.  I think the Viltrox Pro 75E is simply amazing.

Pros:

  • Next level build quality
  • Inclusion of weather sealing 
  • Aperture can be declicked
  • AF/MF switch plus focus hold button
  • STM focus motor provides accurate focus even at F1.2
  • Faster maximum aperture than competing lenses
  • Excellent sharpness at F1.2
  • Excellent control of aberrations
  • Essentially no distortion
  • Very nice bokeh
  • APO-like performance
  • USB port for firmware updates
  • Amazing price to performance ratio

Cons:

  • Vignette a little heavy
  • Some may find the lens large and heavy

 

Gear Used:

Purchase the Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 @ B&H Photo  | AdoramaViltrox (use code DUSTINABBOTT for 10% off) | Amazon | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Pergear Store | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony a7RV @ B&H Photo | AdoramaAmazon | Camera Canada | Sony Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony a6700 @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Sony Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

 

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Keywords: Viltrox, Viltrox AF, Viltrox 75mm, Viltrox 75mm, F1.2, f/1.2, STM, Viltrox AF 75mm F1.2, Viltrox 75mm Review, Viltrox AF 75mm F1.2 Review, E-mount, Sony, Review, Sony a6700, Sony a6600, Sony a6400, Sony a7RV, Bokeh, Portrait, Dustin Abbott, Tracking, Hands On, Video Test, Sharpness, Autofocus, Build, Real World, Letthelightin, DA, #letthelightin, #DA, #Photography

DISCLAIMER: This article and description contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 E-Mount Image Gallery

Dustin Abbott

July 28th, 2023

8 months ago I gave a glowing review of the Fuji X-mount version of the Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2.   It was a stunningly good lens that managed to deliver next level improvements to the build and optics.  I knew then that a Sony E-mount version of the lens was inevitable, and it has finally arrived.  In what has become typical Viltrox fashion, it’s not the same lens ported over, however, but Viltrox has managed to deliver some key improvements that makes the Sony E-mount version even better than the Fuji version was.  This includes some new features like the ability to declick the aperture, a focus hold button, and their stylish new orange/red weather sealing gasket that they debuted on the amazing Viltrox AF 16mm F1.8 full frame lens (my review here). 

The Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 is the first in their new series of “Pro” lenses, with a rumored 27mm F1.2 soon to follow.  The Pro series has a more upscale build and feature set along with truly premium options.  The Pro 75E is an APS-C lens, so the crop factor of the camera it is mounted on will affect its apparent aperture.   Sony’s E-mount has a crop factor of 1.5 which will make the lens behave something like 115mm on a full frame camera – a very, very intriguing focal length for portrait work, particularly with that extremely wide maximum aperture.  There isn’t really any true competition for this lens on Sony, as dedicated portrait telephoto lenses with fast maximum apertures for APS-C just haven’t existed.  You will love the Pro AF 75mm F1.2; it has the ability to just crush backgrounds.

The only thing that held the Fuji version of the lens back was that the autofocus was only so-so (it has since been improved via firmware), but this new Sony version has the advantages of A) having had that additional development time to perfect the AF and B) the fact that Sony’s autofocus is better than Fuji’s at this point, particularly since my “APS-C” camera on Sony is the APS-C crop mode of the amazing Sony a7RV.  It’s 26MP in APS-C mode matches that of the new Sony a6700 but with the superior ergonomics and autofocus of Sony’s bigger full frame bodies. I was blown away with how much better autofocus was on the new Sony version, particularly with action sequences.  I could easily pick out a bird in flight at F1.2…and look at how amazing the results are! 

Viltrox claims near APO levels of correction for chromatic aberrations, which I’ve definitely verified to be true.  That’s extremely impressive in a lens with this wide of an aperture.  This Pro AF 75mm has a tremendous amount of “bite” even at F1.2, and at its best the lens produces images that look much, much more expensive than the price tag suggests.

It seems absurd to say, but the last few lenses from Viltrox have left me with as much anticipation for their new releases as any brand out there, and part of that is that they continue to deliver incredible value.  The MSRP of the Pro AF 75mm as it comes to market is $549USD (though if you buy it from the Viltrox store and use code DUSTINABBOTT you can get 10% any Viltrox product, including this lens), which makes this lens an absolute bargain relative to the performance.  The Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 in Sony E-mount isn’t quite perfect, but it is as about as close as it gets.   If you want more information, you can watch my definitive video review, read my text review, or just enjoy the photos below.

 

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Thanks to Viltrox for sending me an evaluation copy of the 75mm F1.2.   As always, this is a completely independent review. 

Photos of the Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 E-Mount

Photos Taken with Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 

 

Gear Used:

Purchase the Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 @ B&H Photo  | AdoramaViltrox (use code DUSTINABBOTT for 10% off) | Amazon | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Pergear Store | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony a7RV @ B&H Photo | AdoramaAmazon | Camera Canada | Sony Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony a6700 @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Sony Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

 

Want to support this channel? Use these affiliate links to shop at: B&H Photo | Amazon | Adorama | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Ebay | Make a donation via Paypal

Buy DA Merchandise https://bit.ly/TWIMerch

 

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Keywords: Viltrox, Viltrox AF, Viltrox 75mm, Viltrox 75mm, F1.2, f/1.2, STM, Viltrox AF 75mm F1.2, Viltrox 75mm Review, Viltrox AF 75mm F1.2 Review, E-mount, Sony, Review, Sony a6700, Sony a6600, Sony a6400, Sony a7RV, Bokeh, Portrait, Dustin Abbott, Tracking, Hands On, Video Test, Sharpness, Autofocus, Build, Real World, Letthelightin, DA, #letthelightin, #DA, #Photography

DISCLAIMER: This article and description contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Tamron 17-70mm F2.8 VC RXD X-Mount Review

Dustin Abbott

July 24th, 2023

In January 2021 I released my review of this lens for Sony E-mount cameras.  At the time, no Tamron lenses were available on Fuji X-mount, and I spoke in my conclusion about how a lens like the Tamron 17-70mm F2.8 Di III-a VC RXD actually gave Sony an advantage – it’s the kind of lens I call a “system seller”.  On paper it has pretty much everything:  a great focal range (25.5-105mm full frame equivalent), a large maximum aperture through the zoom range (F2.8), optical stabilization (Vibration Compensation, or VC), and a fast focus system (RXD).  But that advantage is no longer on Sony alone, as this was one of the first lenses to come to Fuji X-mount from Tamron once Fuji began opening up their platform to third party lenses.  That’s an amazing focal range to have a constant aperture of F2.8 over, covering from this at 17mm:

…to this at 70mm:

It also is a great value.  The current price at B&H Photo is $699 USD, which is a full $500 cheaper than the Fujinon XF 16-55mm F2.8 LM WR (my review here) or $200 less than the Fujinon XF 18-120mm F4 PZD (my review coming soon).  The Tamron doesn’t perfectly align with either of those lenses, but they are the closest competitors I can point to on the platform.  Sigma has also made their 18-50mm F2.8 DC available on Fuji X-mount (my review here), but the main reasons to consider the Sigma would be price ($549 USD) and compact size as the Tamron 17-70mm VC has the advantage in focal range, weather sealing, and also includes an optical stabilizer.  I’ve been interested in revisiting some of these third party lenses on X-mount for two primary reasons:  1) to see how autofocus performs on a new platform and 2) to see how the lens’ optics survive the very pixel dense 40MP Fuji X-Trans sensor on some of their new cameras. 

I found the 17-70mm VC a little big for the Sony a6400 body that I reviewed it on previously, but my Fujifilm X-H2 (my review here) is more like a full frame camera is size and the lens is a perfect fit on the X-H2.

Tamron loves its initials in their lens names, so let’s sort out that alphabet soup.  Di III is their designation for a mirrorless lens design, and, in this case, the addition of -A at the (Di III-A) refers to their development for APS-C mirrorless.  VC is Vibration Compensation, which is Tamron’s name for their proprietary OIS (image stabilization) system.  It’s worth noting that neither of the Fuji alternatives (both of which cost more) come with built in stabilization.  RXD refers to the focus motor, which is similar to the linear motors employed on many of Fuji’s better lenses.  In short, this lens is pretty loaded with quality features under its skin even if there aren’t a lot of external features on the barrel.  

So does the Tamron 17-70mm F2.8 VC RXD impress me as much on Fuji as it did on Sony?  You can watch my conclusions in my video review, or just read on to find out…

 

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Thanks to Tamron USA for sending me an loaner of the lens.  As always, this is a completely independent review.  I have used both my personal Fujifilm X-H2 (my review here) and a loaner of the X-S20 (my review here) for this review.

Tamron 17-70mm VC Build, Handling, and Features

As noted, the Tamron 17-70mm VC is more like a full frame sized lens.  You can’t make this large of a zoom range (4.11x zoom ratio) with this large of a constant maximum aperture (F2.8) without making a larger lens even when designing for the smaller APS-C sensor.   The lens is 74.6mm (2.9″) in diameter (about average), but is fairly long at 119.3mm (4.7″).  Like most of Tamron’s mirrorless lenses the 17-70mm VC has a 67mm front filter thread.  That makes the Tamron longer than the XF 16-55mm F2.8 (106mm), though that lens is considerably wider (83.3mm) and weighs more at 655mm.   The 17-70mm F2.8 is 525 grams (1.2 lb).  Here’s a look at how the specs break down:

The lens extends an additional 27mm when zoomed to 70mm, so when zoomed out and and the hood attached, this is not a small lens:

So not small, but it’s worth noting that the weight is light enough that the lens balances fine on most Fuji bodies, though it will obviously be a better match for the larger X-T or X-H bodies.

That bright maximum aperture of F2.8 helps the versatility of this lens, as it makes it more useful in lower light conditions or as an event/wedding zoom. While the depth of field is more equivalent to a full frame F4 lens, the F2.8 aperture will always have the light gathering capability of an F2.8 lens (regardless of whether attached to APS-C or Full Frame), meaning that the shutter speed of an F2.8 lens on APS-C would be the same as the shutter speed under identical conditions of an F2.8 lens on a full frame camera.

As has been Tamron’s design philosophy thus far, the design language is clean, modern, and without distractions.  That’s the nice way of putting it.  The glass half empty approach is to note that there are no features on the outside of the lens.  No AF/MF switch, no aperture ring – just the zoom and focus rings.  Aperture rings were rare on Sony in the past, but the aperture ring has been a very common design element on Fuji.  It is also rare, in my experience, for a lens equipped with an optical stabilizer to not have an ON/OFF switch for it mounted on the barrel.

All we have on the barrel is the two rings.  The position of the two rings on the 17-70mm is reversed relative to the 11-20mm, which is unfortunate for those who will buy both lenses to use as a kit.  The closer (and narrower) of the two is the manual focus ring.  You will have to select manual focus from within the camera, though this is common on Fuji cameras and is fairly simple if you have a body that has the Focus Mode lever or button on the front. This (like all mirrorless lenses) is focus-by-wire, meaning that focus input on the focus ring is routed through the focus motor to move the elements.  Manual focus feel is fairly light and without a lot of tactile feedback.  Typical manual focus aids are all available, as Tamron lenses on Fuji function largely like native lenses.  

The zoom ring is close to the front of the camera.  It is fairly wide and has a rubberized, ribbed texture.  It moves smoothly through the zoom range without any sticking points.  The inner barrel will extend about 27cm at the 70mm position, and is fully retracted at the 17mm position.  The inner barrel extends smoothly and without any wobble.

Tamron has included a shallow, petal-shaped lens hood with deep ribs inside that disrupt stray light bouncing around.  It’s plastic and lightweight, but the quality of the plastics is apparent by feel.  It doesn’t feel as cheap as some hoods that I see.  It feels like it could take a few bumps without cracking (in fact my test copy and X-H2 came off my tripod while shooting some tests.  It fell a couple of feet to the carpeted floor, landing on the lens hood.  No harm, no foul, though to be safe I’ll be having Tamron check out the lens to make sure that it remained properly centered).  All of the product shots were taken post-fall, so you can see that the lens weathered that bump well.

The lens’ housing is a nice grade of engineered plastics with a satin finish.  There’s a platinum-colored accept ring right near the lens mount.  Nothing fancy on the outside, but the lens “look” is clean and it looks nice mounted on the camera.

As noted, however, the good stuff is inside.  There’s a rubber gasket at the lens mount that is the outer evidence of the weather sealing inside, and this is diagram from Tamron shows that there are a total of seven seal points in the lens.  This is capped off by a nice fluorine coating on the front element, which not only helps protect it from scratches but also makes it water and fingerprint resistant and thus easier to clean.

Tamron’s recent trends regarding MFD (minimum focus distance) hold true here, as the lens sports two different MFDs for wide (0.19m/7.5″) and telephoto (0.39m/15.5″).  You can get to nearly 0.21x magnification on the wide end and right over 0.19x on the telephoto end.  I find the figure on the wide end less useful, however, as you have to get to within only 6-7cm of your subject to achieve that magnification, meaning that there is a STRONG chance of shading your subject with the lens.  Distortion and field curvature is also exaggerated that close, leaving only a small “sweet spot” where focus is achieved.  Here’s a look at the MFD at 17mm, then 70mm, and then the result at 17mm:

You can see that the field curvature is exaggerated up close.  The magnification is a little lower at 70mm, but it’s a little easier to get:

Unfortunately image quality isn’t quite as strong up close at 70mm, but I still found close up images looked quite nice:

We’ve got a nine bladed aperture that prioritizes keeping things circular.  Here’s a look at the bokeh geometry from F2.8 – F5.6:

The geometry looks pretty good, with fairly consistently circular shapes across the frame.  Despite the rounded aperture iris the lens manages to produce a nice sunstar effect at 17mm when stopped down:

The inclusion of IBIS (In-Body-Image-Stabilization) has become much more common in Fuji cameras in the past three years, but that doesn’t change the fact that there are still a lot of Fuji cameras without IBIS.  That makes the inclusion of Tamron’s VC (Vibration Compensation) important for stills, yes, but even more so for getting stable handheld video footage.  Because I tested the lens on two cameras with IBIS (X-H2 and X-S20), I can’t turn either of the stabilization systems off independently, so I can’t really tell what the VC is doing and what IBIS is doing.  I was able to handhold 70mm at shutter speeds of 1/4th of a second and get stable results:

I also had a nicely stable platform for video.  Walking with the camera still doesn’t have anything like the smoothness of a gimbal, but it was better than what I’ve seen in many other such situations.  If you don’t have a camera with IBIS, however, the stabilization of the 17-70mm VC could be a game changer for you.

The Tamron 17-70mm RXD lacks an aperture ring, and the exterior finish doesn’t come across as premium as Fuji’s own nicer lenses, but there are a lot of positives here as well.  Stabilization, weather sealing, close focus performance – these are all very important in real world situations.

Autofocus and Video Performance

The Tamron 17-70mm F2.8 has Tamron’s excellent Rapid eXtra-silent stepping Drive (RXD). 

In design, it looks like the linear motors designed by Fuji or Sony.  I’ve been interested to see how the RXD works on Fuji (I’ve previously tested on Sony).  Like the 11-20mm F2.8 that I tested first, I found that the RXD motor is pretty much flawless for stills, with fast, quiet focus on either the X-H2 or X-S20 bodies that I used for the review.

This is a far cry from some of the older Fuji lenses I’ve used, with noisy focus motors that were slow and rough.  Quality of focus is more akin to the newest Linear Motor equipped lenses.  I never really heard the focus motor, and focus accuracy was excellent even in less than ideal light (this is a 1/35th of a second shot, ISO 1600, F2.8):

Eye AF detection for people shots were generally excellent.  I attended the wedding of a friend (not in a official capacity), but supplemented their photos with my own.  I used the X-H2 and 17-70mm F2.8 for the “people photos”, and I got well focused results across the many images I took:

This certainly would work as a great lens to have mounted on at least one body for shooting weddings, giving you the ability to cover from wide to telephoto with an F2.8 aperture and accurate autofocus. 

I also got accurately focused results of Nala as she stalked through the tall grasses.

I also used the “Insect Detection” mode and tracked some bee action at my hive.

I also had zero problems with smaller apertures and shooting landscapes.  I got a lot of beautiful landscape shots with the lens and didn’t have any issue with pulsing or hunting at smaller apertures.

Here’s another:

I have no complaints for stills.  Focus was fast, quiet, and accurate.

Video focus pulls were less stellar, however, which follows a trend that I’ve seen with Tamron lenses on Fuji thus far.   There is some visible stepping in the actual pulls; the initial focus move, a split second pause, and then the final adjustment. I didn’t see any of this on the Sony version of the lens, so it is probably more of a Fuji problem in general, as I do tend to see more stepping on Fuji than other platforms.

There is a moderate amount of focus breathing.  The results from my “hand test” were a little better, as the focus changes are smaller, but I still saw a bit of stepping.  More subtle focus transitions during video capture were relatively smooth, but did show some steps.  I’m hoping this is something that can improved either through firmware updates to the camera or lens in the future.

So, for stills I can give an unreserved “thumbs up”, but would encourage a little caution if your video style includes big autofocus pulls.

Tamron 17-70mm VC Image Quality

The 17-70mm F2.8 VC sports an optical formula of 16 elements in 12 groups, with 5 of those being exotic elements (molded glass aspherical, hybrid aspherical, and Low Dispersion).  Here’s a look at the optical design and MTFs:

If you understand MTF diagrams, you will note that these are very good looking MTFs for a standard zoom…particularly one with an extra-large zoom range.  17mm shows a very consistent performance across the frame, with 70mm presenting as sharper in the center but a little weaker in the corner.  The transition to the 40MP sensor of Fujifilm X-H2 is a brutal one, however, as that is more pixels packed onto a sensor this size than ever before.  All of the flaws will be apparent here.

Here’s a look at the vignette and distortion at 17mm:

When I reviewed the Tamron 11-20mm, I was surprised to see considerably more vignetting on the Fuji version than I had on the Sony version.  I thought it was some kind of testing fluke at the time, but I’m seeing the same here, so this is an obvious trend.  The optical design is the same as the Sony version, so I must surmise that the additional vignette has to do with Fuji.  X-mount is several millimeters smaller in diameter than the Sony E-mount, so it is possible that there is some additional vignetting for the simple reason that the original design is for a larger mount and the transition to a smaller mount is introducing more vignette.

Or I’m completely wrong.

What I do know is that I saw about two stops of vignette at 17mm on the Sony version, and I see closer to 4 stops here (I had to max out the correction slider and you can still see a little darkness in the extreme corners).  I had a similar jump on the Tamron 11-20mm.  There is also some barrel distortion that isn’t quite linear in correcting (a slight wave pattern).  The amount of distortion isn’t huge, however, and I used a +6 to correct it.   Tamron seems to enjoy full in-camera correction support on Fuji, so use the standard profile in camera for JPEGs and Video for a cleaner still result.  As always, RAW images will require using the correction profile, which does in fact do a cleaner job in correcting the distortion than my manual correction.

As is typical for a lens like this, the distortion pattern flips to a pincushion style distortion on the telephoto, though this distortion is even more linear and easier still to correct for.  Vignette was also lower. 

I used a -9 to correct the distortion and a +70 to correct the vignette.  There’s nothing that is a dealbreaker here due to good corrections.

The 17-70mm VC does suffer from some longitudinal chromatic aberrations that show up as fringing before and after the plane of focus.  This will rob the lens of some contrast.  Fringing is more obvious on very high resolution bodies because the fringing occupies more pixels thus becomes more obvious when viewed at 100%.  If you aren’t zooming into the image it won’t be more obvious, however.

You can see it in the out of focus region, though its not obvious or ruining the image.

I could see trace amounts of lateral chromatic aberrations on my chart (fringing in dark to light transitions near the edge of the frame) if I magnified to 200%, they were too insignificant to see in real world use, and a one click correction either in camera in (for RAWs) in software will clean those up nicely:

Let’s move on to resolution and contrast.  I do my examinations at 200% magnification, as this clearly shows lens strengths and flaws for you to see.  This is an extreme torture test, exaggerating strengths and weaknesses.  The good news is that real world results always look a little better (mostly because you don’t view them at 200%!) 

A note on sharpening:  Adobe Lightroom (my home base for cataloging, testing, and displaying images) doesn’t always play well with Fuji X-Trans sensors.  They are fairly notorious for looking “wormy” when applying sharpness, and thus require a deft touch to produce good results.  Using Adobe’s “Enhance” option helps, though at the cost of tripling the stored file size (files are typically north of 150MB).  I have worked hard to develop a sharpness preset for my X-H2 images that sharpens using a different technique than I typically use for my other cameras.  By utilizing both techniques I can produce a demonstrably better result, though at the cost of additional work and storage size.  I don’t do this for all images, but I will for the main test subjects below.

First, here’s my test chart:

We will start with F2.8 crops (near 200%) at 17mm from the center, mid-frame, and extreme lower right corner.  Stopping down to F5.6 further improves contrast a bit as aberrations clear up.

We can see a fairly consistent performance across the frame (as suggested by the MTF), with good sharpness in the center of the frame, mid-frame, and only a mild drop in the corners.  Contrast isn’t off the charts, and that is in part because of the challenge of performing on a much higher resolution sensor than the last time I tested the lens.  That’s the challenge of such a high resolution sensor on APS-C, though it’s not quite so dire in the real world.  I compare results at 200% here.  Out in the real world at a more typical 100% magnification things look better…even when shooting a landscape at F2.8:

Stopping down to F4 produces little difference in the center or mid-frame, but I did see some improvement in the outer third of the image frame.  Stopping on down to F5.6 increases contrast a bit more, and image quality is quite strong across the frame even on this high resolution beast:

Real world results at F5.6 are very nice with nice contrast and detail across the frame.

At 24mm I found resolution and contrast just a little bit higher all across the frame.  Contrast in particular is noticeably better.

Contrast and detail edge up very slightly at 35mm, and real world results look nice:

I really love this image of an unscripted moment with the bride and groom.

There is a tiny regression at 50mm with contrast dropping a bit, though the difference would be hard to spot without having the images side by side.  Contrast improves again by F4 and F5.6.  Here’s an F2.8 shot:

That trend continues at 70mm, where the results are noticeably softer on the copy I tested.  That leaves more room for improved image quality when stopping the lens down, and there’s a much bigger difference between F2.8 and F5.6 than at other focal lengths.

That slightly reduced contrast look can have a flattering effect for portraits, however.

Stopped down to smaller apertures and the lens produces detailed images at 70mm:

In my Sony review I was very impressed by the sharpness of the lens and less impressed by the bokeh, but on this high resolution body my opinion is slightly different.  I’m less blown away by the sharpness but find the bokeh quality better than I remembered.  This image shows a very soft profile on the bokeh.

I shot this high ISO image on the lower resolution X-S20 at 24mm, and while the background isn’t strongly blurred out, the transition to defocus looks fairly good.

Here’s one more that looks fairly nice.

The one negative that remains true is that if there are bright specular highlights in the image (like Christmas lights), you will see some concentric circles in the “bokeh balls”.  That’s obviously not a desirable trait.

Flare resistance is quite good.  Tamron utilized their premium BBAR lens coatings here, which tend to be extremely effective in resisting flare artifacts.  In this sequence of photos you can see flare resistance at 17mm (at F11), then at 70mm F11 (the worst result I could find), followed by a real world shot with the sun right at the edge of the frame.

Even doing video pans across the sun produced very little negative effects.

While I didn’t have a chance to test coma on Fuji due to forest fires negatively impacting our air this summer, I did test it on Sony.  “Coma performance is quite good, with night sky images looking clean other than a bit of “star-stretching” in the corners.”

For the money you certainly aren’t going to beat this image quality in a standard zoom on Fuji.  It’s a full $500 cheaper than the closest competitor – the Fuji XF 16-55mm F2.8.  I think the Fuji delivers slightly richer colors, but outside of that, the Tamron is very competitive, and I would definitely take it over a lens like the XF 16-80mm F4 in terms of sharpness.  At the least, the Tamron brings intriguing new option to the Fuji X platform with a bigger zoom range than some and a larger aperture than others.  There’s a lot of good optically, and little major issues.  You can check out more photos by visiting the image gallery page here.

Conclusion

The Tamron 17-70mm F2.8 Di III-A VC RXD is a welcome addition to the Fuji X-mount standard zoom options.  In most other cases you have to choose between maximum aperture (16-80mm F4 or 18-120mm F4) or lack of stabilization (16-55mm F2.8), but with the Tamron you get both the larger maximum aperture along with the optical stabilization.  It has a very compelling zoom range that covers a lot of subjects, and the close focus abilities and good magnification are also useful.

This is the kind of lens that you can pretty much glue onto your camera and use it for everyday photography, travel, and more.  It can handle most subjects, and that constant maximum aperture of F2.8 is obviously going to be useful when going into lower light situations.

The price point in the US is $699 USD, currently, and it is a lot of lens for the money.  The Tamron 17-70mm VC should definitely be on your list if you’re looking for a fast standard zoom and can’t afford the premium 16-55mm F2.8.  Fuji opening up its platform to lenses like this is a huge plus for consumers like us…and expect Fuji’s next standard zoom to be all the better for the competition!

Pros:

  • Great zoom range
  • Maintains F2.8 aperture
  • Good build with weather sealing
  • Fast, quiet, and accurate autofocus
  • Good image stabilization (VC)
  • Consistently good optics
  • Good flare resistance
  • Excellent price

Cons:

  • Concentric rings in bokeh highlights (onion bokeh)
  • No switches or aperture ring
  • Some stepping during video focus transitions
  • Stronger vignette on Fuji than on Sony

 

Gear Used:

Purchase the Tamron 17-70mm F2.8 RXD @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Tamron 11-20mm F2.8 RXD @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada |  Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Fujifilm X-S20 @ B&H Photo | Adorama  | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany | Ebay 

Purchase the Fujifilm X-H2 @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Fujifilm X-T5 @ B&H Photo | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Find it Used at KEH 

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Keywords: Tamron 17-70mm F2.8 RXD, withmytamron, X-Mount, X, Fuji, Fujifilm, X-H2, weather sealing, B060, Tamron 17-70 RXD, RXD, VC, Tamron 17-70mm F2.8 VC VXD, F2.8, 17-70mm, Di-IIIa, Sony, E-mount, Tamron 17-70mm Review, Tamron 17-70 review, Review,  Hands On, Dustin Abbott, Real World, Comparison, Sharpness, Autofocus, Image Quality, Sample Images, Video, Photography, Astrophotography, #letthelightin, #DA, #weather sealing

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Sony FE 70-200mm F4 Macro G OSS II Review

Dustin Abbott

July 12th, 2023

Sony just keeps hitting one home run after another.  Their newest lens – the Sony FE 70-200mm F4 Macro G OSS II (or SEL70200G II) – is one of the most versatile telephoto lenses I’ve ever used.  Perhaps that’s why the name has to be so long; this lens does a LOT of things.  It covers the popular 70-200mm focal range, which covers from this:

to this at 200mm:

It delivers 1:2 macro all across the zoom range, allowing you to get ever closer as you move from 200mm towards 70mm, allowing you to get beautiful macro-like shots…like this one of tiny budding blackberries.

What’s unique about this is that it gives you a lot of different framing options, and the ability to get slightly different macro style shots at different focal lengths – not to mention the flexibility for video footage as you don’t really have to work about getting too close to the camera.  It has updated OSS (Optical Steady Shot), which further enhances the ability to get stable video and photos without the need of a tripod.  It’s smaller and lighter than the first generation 70-200mm F4, but unlike the Canon RF 70-200mm F4, it retains the ability to use teleconverters…which also allows you to get even higher macro performance (0.75x with a 1.4x TC [shown below] and 1:1 macro with a 2.0x TC).

The Tamron 35-150mm F2-2.8 VXD has stood out to me as being perhaps the most versatile lens on the Sony platform, and in some ways that’s still true (focal range and aperture), but this new Sony 70-200mm F4 Macro G is even more versatile in other ways.  This is an incredibly useful lens that can do a lot of things well…and it might mean that you skip buying a macro and use this lens for even more things.  Should the SEL70200G II (as Sony calls it) go to the top of your wishlist?   You can judge for yourself by either watching my video review below or reading on to get the full picture.

 

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Thanks to Sony USA for sending me a pre-release review loaner of this lens. As always, this is a completely independent review. *The tests and most of the photos that I share as a part of my review cycle have been done with the Sony a7RV along with the Sony Alpha 1 that serve as my benchmark cameras for Sony lenses.

SLE70200G II Build and Handling

The current trend on mirrorless is to try to take advantage of advancing lens manufacturing technologies and shrink the size of lenses.  Canon changed their RF design from an internally zooming design to an externally zooming design, which enabled them to take a whopping 56mm off the length when retracted for storage (though when the RF lens is zoomed out it is only 2mm shorter).  That makes it much easier to transport and even to balance on camera, though with Canon, that came at a price.  Sacrificed at the altar of compact size was the ability to use teleconverters, which unfortunately limits the versatility of the RF lens.  Sony has taken a similar route with the SEL70200G II, moving to a externally zooming design, though they learned from Canon’s mistake and compromised with the size just enough to allow for both the 1.4x and 2.0x teleconverters to be used without restriction.  The first generation 70-200mm F4 was 175mm long (internally zooming, so that length was constant), while the new lens (by my measurement) is 150mm (5.9″) retracted, though it extends to about 205mm (8″) when zoomed to 200mm.   

Not everyone will be happy about the transition to an externally zooming design, but I personally appreciate the route that Sony has taken here.  The SEL70200G II is an easy lens to transport and fits in far more bags than the internally zooming design, but Sony’s approach has not left it compromised in performance.  There are some advantages to internally zooming lenses. 

  1. The first is that they are often easier to handle the in field, with zoom adjustments typically taking no more than effort than what you can do with a finger.  Sony has countered this by really doing a great job with the zoom action.  I wouldn’t say the zoom action is quite as light as the excellent 70-200mm F2.8 GM II (internally zooming), but it isn’t much heavier.
  2. The second objection is that people feel that internally zooming lenses are more weather sealed.  This is often more perception than reality, and the SEL70200G II sports about 15 weather sealing points in the lens.  This is a professional grade lens with professional weather sealing; internal dust and moisture should not be a problem.
  3. Those that do video prefer internally zooming lenses because the balancing point remains constant for use with gimbals or stabilizers.  Sony has done their best to make this a nicely balanced lens, but there is no question that the balance point does move when the lens is zoomed out.

The tradeoff is excellent portability and better balance when carrying the lens on a strap or harness.  

The diameter of the lens is about 80mm (3.1″)*, which is the same as the previous model.  The SEL70200G II retains the 72mm filter thread of the previous lens as well.  The weight is 862g (30.4oz)* with the tripod collar attached, or 794g (28oz)* without.  *These are my measurements, not official measurements.  You can see from the image above that the SEL70200G II is both narrower and shorter than the Tamron 35-150mm, which is also an externally zooming lens.

As noted above, Sony left room for both the narrower 1.4x teleconverter (shown) and the thicker 2.0x teleconverter to be used without issue.

This really expands the versatility of the lens, as you can get up to 280mm (maximum aperture of F5.6) with the 1.4x and up to 400mm (F8) with 2.0x.  Sony’s strong optical design in both the lens and the teleconverters mean that the lens remains very sharp even with the TCs attached.  This shot is at 280mm, F5.6:

There are 9 aperture blades that help keep the aperture shape circular when stopped down.  Geometry across the frame is really good for specular highlights even wide open, F5.6 remains perfect, and you can start to see the shape of the blades by F8:

The minimum focus distances varies through the zoom range, from as little as 26cm (0.86ft) at 70mm to 42cm (1.38ft) at 200mm.  This dramatically cuts down the MFD on the first generation lens, which was a full meter (39 inches) and delivered only a 0.13x magnification.  The much closer focus distance of the SEL70200G II delivers a 0.50x magnification throughout the zoom range (both 70 and 100mm are shown below), and when I add my 1.4x TC, that magnification climbs even higher to 0.75%.

What I enjoy about this is the ability change up the framing to what best suits the image while still being able to get very close.  It should be remembered that MFD is not from the front of the lens, but from the sensor.  I measure the lens length from the sensor at 16.7cm at 70mm, leaving less than 10cm as the working distance (about four inches).  The lens measures 22.5cm from the sensor at 200mm, but that leaves about 20cm as a working distance (8″), which might prove more practical with some subjects.  You can see from these photos that the 200mm position (second image) definitely gives you more space from your subject.  

Up close performance is very, very nice, delivering rich images in both color and detail.  You can see that depth of field is very shallow at F4 at this “macro” distance.

I use quotes around the word macro, as some debate whether any magnification lower than 1:1 qualifies as a true macro lens, though I’ve certainly seen (and owned) many lenses called macro which had the same 1:2 magnifications as this lens, so I think it is fair for Sony to use that designation.

Sony has upped their game in terms of the physical controls on recent lenses, though this G lenses doesn’t have quite as many as the 70-20mm F2.8 GM II lens.  There’s no aperture ring (and thus no declick option or iris lock).  But Sony has upped the total of Focus Hold Buttons to 3 here to allow one to easily fall to hand whether shooting in vertical or horizontal modes.  This can be programmed to multiple functions from within the camera (my current preference is to control Eye AF so I can prioritize a certain eye).

There is an extensive bank of switches on the left side of the lens barrel.  This starts with an AF/MF switch, following by an ON/OFF for the full time DMF (direct manual focus) function.  I like this option, as one of my persistent complaints about Sony focus has been that sometimes it is very reluctant to focus on a close foreground object and focus stays “stuck” on a background subject.  DMF allows me to quickly override that and pull focus forward, where typically autofocus will then focus without issue on my desired subject.

This is followed by a focus limiter complete with a new third position (Full, 3M to ∞, and Macro).  The latter will be very handy when doing close up work to avoid by focus racks as the lens searches for the right focus position.  I’m not sure the other positions will be often needed, as autofocus is incredibly fast. 

There are two OSS (Optical Steady Shot) related switches that come next:  an ON/OFF switch along with 3 OSS modes (1 Standard | 2 Panning | 3 Active – prioritizes stabilization of image capture rather than viewfinder). 

The bottommost switch will be more easily accessed when either the tripod collar is removed or rotated to a vertical orientation.

I felt like the OSS worked better here than on the 70-200 GM II that I reviewed earlier in the year.  I was able to get fairly consistently stable results at 200mm and 1/3rd of a second on my a7RV.  That’s nearly six stops of assistance, which is great.  The viewfinder also stayed very stable throughout the process as well, which really helps to do handheld macro work.

Don’t expect successful macro shots at handheld shots with shutter speeds that low, but I did find it easy to get nice handheld macro shots due to the excellent OSS:

Since this is an externally zooming lens, it needed a zoom lock switch, which Sony included.  It can only be locked at the 70mm position, and I found that I did need it when hiking with the lens.  The problem was not with zoom creep in general, but because movement would eventually cause friction on the zoom ring and cause it to extend.   

The tripod collar is easily removed by loosening a tension knob and pulling the two sections apart.  That same tension knob at lower levels allows you to rotate the tripod collar for shooting in a vertical positions  There are markings but not detents at the cardinal positions.  I have only one real complaint here, and that is that the tripod foot is not Arca compatible, so you will have to add a quick release plate before mounting it on a tripod.  

The zoom ring is located nearest the camera body, and it is ribbed and rubberized.  As noted, it moves very smoothly for an externally zooming lens, with no hitches or spots of uneven tension.  A full zoom from 70-200mm takes roughly 90° of rotation.

The manual focus ring is located near the front of the lens.  It is slightly narrower but has a similar ribbed design.  Focus action is smooth but very light – not a lot of feel.

I appreciate the fact that the lens hood is color matched to the lens.  Sometimes these “white” lenses come with a black hood, and it never seems like the hood was actually made for the lens.  Sony has shifted to a petal shaped hood here, which is more rare on a telephoto lens.  It does help reduce the overall size of the hood.

This smaller, lighter lens is a better balance for Sony’s smaller than average camera bodies.  I really, really enjoyed using this lens and appreciated the excellent ergonomics and overall form factor of the lens.  Sony’s 70-200mm F2.8 GM II is an outstanding lens, but the more than $1000 difference in price will help make this F4 version more appealing to those that decide that they can live without an F2.8 aperture.  

Sony 70-200mm F4 Macro G II Autofocus Performance

An area where Sony is able to create a distinct advantage for its lenses is in the realm of autofocus.  They has employed four!! XD (extreme dynamic) Linear Motors to the autofocus system here with one pair of motors on each side of the focusing group.  This provides blazingly fast autofocus speeds that can keep with pretty much any kind of action.  Sony also limits their top burst speeds on their sports cameras like the Alpha 1 or a9 series to Sony lenses, so I can get a full 30FPS with the SEL70200G II and my Alpha 1 whereas I would be  limited to 15FPS if using a third party lens instead.  I had no problem keeping up with basketball action during long bursts on my A1:

I got down low and shot through grasses to get this delightful shot of Nala with a little bit of a snarl on her face.

I was also extremely impressed by this shot, as focus ignored the tangled brush and fence in the foreground, the hairs from the mane hanging over the eyes, and nailed focus on the heavily shadowed eye perfectly.

Portrait and wedding photography will be a breeze with this lens and a decent camera body.  It just nails focus on the eye:

I brought the lens along to a wedding of some friends, and every shot was perfectly focused.

The newest Sony cameras like the a7RV have insect detection mode, and that works nicely for nailing focus on one of my honeybees.

On the video front, video pulls are quick, quiet, and confident as you might expect with a first party Sony lens equipped with 4 focus motors.  There is a very small amount of focus breathing  and when I tested it on the a7RV and turned on the “Focus Breathing Compensation” setting there is a mild improvement and at very little crop because of the low amount of breathing to begin with.  I would call the amount of focus breathing fairly good.  The lens also performed well (as expected) in my “hand test”, quickly transitioning back to tracking my eye after I blocked visibility of my eyes with my hand towards the lens.  

My general focus results were excellent.  Focus is incredibly snappy and precise, and that allows the amazing optics to shine.  Autofocus is a definite strength here.

Bottom line is that we have a top notch focus system here that is able to keep up with the most demanding photography or video scenarios.

Sony SEL70200G II Image Quality

At this stage I have come to expect that Sony’s new lens releases are typically going to be pretty fantastic optically, and I’m certainly not disappointed here.  The quality of the optical design shines through in images that look great right out of the camera.  Some lenses require some processing to give images sparkle, but this is a lens that will make you feel like you really don’t need to do much editing work at all.  Here’s a RAW image with basically no edits other than my import sharpening.

I was just happy with the look of images, period, so prepare yourself for a fairly glowing section here.

Longitudinal chromatic aberrations (LoCA) typically show up as purple/magenta fringing before the plane of focus and blue/green fringing beyond the plane of focus due to colors not being perfectly focused together.  They typically diminish as the lens is stopped down to smaller apertures.  You can see in this image that there is no visible LoCA in either my real world or chart tests:

Lateral chromatic aberrations (LaCA) show up as fringing on either side of contrast areas (like tree trunks, for example) along the edges of the frame.  Unlike LoCA, they do not improve when stopping the aperture down, but are much easier to correct for (typically a one click “remove chromatic aberrations” box in editing software).  We can see once again that there is no evidence of any fringing near the edges of the frame.  The transitions from dark to light are nice and clean.

Next we will take a look at distortion and vignette.  Below you will see a series of images.  

  1. 70mm uncorrected
  2. 70mm manually corrected
  3. 135mm uncorrected
  4. 200mm uncorrected
  5. 200mm manually corrected
  6. 280mm (with 1.4x) uncorrected.

Now, to parse that data:  throughout the zoom range there is some pincushion style distortion.  It is mild at 70mm (-5 to correct), more pronounced at 135mm (-9 to correct), and remains at the same level at 200mm (-9 to correct).  What’s interesting is that adding the 1.4x TC obvious would create some barrel distortion, but in this case it actually just serves to correct the pincushion distortion and the end result is almost distortion free (I used a max of -1 to correct).  Throughout the zoom range the distortion is quite linear and easy to correct cleanly.  No big deal.

Vignette is also not a significant issue.  It was strongest at 70mm, where I used a +38 to correct (about a stop and a half in the corners), but it dropped to a +22 at 135mm (one stop) and a +12 at 200mm (about a half stop).  It was actually even lower with the 1.4x attached (+7), which would make this some of the lowest vignette I’ve ever seen on a zoom lens.  These tests also show the SEL70200G II takes teleconverters (at least the 1.4x) very, very well.

So how about sharpness?  This is the first lens I’ve tested using my new  61MP Sony a7RV for this series of tests, which increases the optical demands from the 50MP of the Alpha 1 that I usually run my tests on.  Here’s a look at the test chart:

And here are the 70mm F4 crops at about 175% magnification, taken from the center, then mid-frame, and then extreme lower right corner:

This is a lens that handles the 61MP resolution point with aplomb.  It is delivering exceptional sharpness everywhere in the frame, and is also delivering exceptionally good centering – every corner looked equally sharp.  Exceptional.

When a lens is this good wide open, there isn’t a lot of room for improvement when it is stopped down.  Comparing F4 and F5.6 showed virtually equal results everywhere save in the extreme corners, where I saw a mild uptick in contrast.  F8 showed about the same result, though down just a percentage point or two due to the effects of diffraction.

Minimum aperture is F22, but by then diffraction has really raised its ugly head.  The image is very soft; diffraction on high resolution cameras makes using apertures smaller than F11 just not worth it.

Real world results at most apertures at 70mm are just fantastic:  great detail, great color, and no real optical flaws.

The performance at 100mm is very similar.  I would say that the center and mid-range are about 1-2 percentage points lower, but the corners are a good 10% better.

135mm brings the highest performance yet, and while 70mm might still be the very slight winner in the center of the frame, the mid-frame and corners are incredibly good.

Real world results in the middle of the zoom range look gorgeous.  Great detail, great color, and lovely bokeh:

At 200mm the results are about the same as at 100mm, so just a fraction off the high point at 135mm, but still exceptionally good.  Once again most of the sharpness is available right at F4, with only a very mild improvement at F5.6:

Real world results look great.

That’s true at macro distances as well, where you can get great detail.

The big question is how the SEL70200G II handles teleconverters.  I don’t have a 2.0x TC (not a huge fan of 2.0x TCs), but I do own the Sony 1.4x.  There’s always some impact to image quality for the simple reason that you are adding 6 additional elements to the optical performance, resulting in some loss of light and the potential of more aberrations.  As you can see from the image below, there is some mild softening of the image and less contrast, but the end result is still sharper than most lenses.

Real world images pack plenty of punch at 280mm:

If you are shooting with one of Sony’s higher resolution bodies, you can switch to APS-C mode and get up to 420mm equivalent reach, which obviously further extends the potential usefulness of the lens.

The bokeh from the lens is beautiful as well.  At close distances it will completely blur out a background:

At medium distances the depth of field isn’t as shallow as an F2.8 lens, but the bokeh is still gorgeous.

If I shoot in the middle of the zoom range the bokeh quality is still excellent:

The truth of the matter is that many people can get by with an F4 telephoto lens.  Depth of field is already quite shallow at many focus distances.  The limiting factor is more shooting in lower light situations, though most modern Sony cameras do fairly well at higher ISO values.

Flare resistance is also quite good due to excellent coatings.  I saw little impact from the sun other than some very mild prismatic veiling.

As you’ve probably seen throughout this review, the lens also produces excellent color.  As noted, I felt like most images needed little to no processing.  They just came out looking great. 

Bottom line:  there’s nothing really to complain here about.  Not only is the SEL70200G II very versatile, but it is high performing at all those various tasks that it can accomplish.  If you would like to see more images, check out my image gallery here.

Conclusion

I don’t need the Sony FE 70-200mm F4 Macro G OSS II.  I’ve got the focal range well covered.  But this is a lens that works so well that it makes you question if maybe, just maybe, you do actually need it.  The SEL70200G II has few flaws and a long list of strengths.  I love the packing, the versatility, and obviously the macro capabilities.

One area that I haven’t yet dealt with is the strength of the lens as a landscape option.  Most people think wide angle lenses for landscapes, but often the “big scenes” actually work better with a telephoto lens.  The ability to tap into the different focal lengths available here along with the great detail, contrast, and color makes this a really great landscape lens, and even more so because it packs quite easily.

This is a lot of lens, and I think it will work for a lot of different photographers.  It is much more affordable than the incredible but incredibly expensive FE 70-200mm F2.8 GM II, which might make it a more realistic target for many photographers at the roughly $1700 price point.  Sony is well into its second generation cycle for lens development, and the lessons learned over the last decade are clearly evident.  Sony’s newest lenses are simply some of the best lenses I’ve ever tested, making new releases a joy to spend time with as a reviewer.  The same will be true for those own the SEL70200G II.  It’s fantastic.

Pros:

  • More compact than first gen lens
  • 1:2 Macro at all focal lengths
  • Plays well with teleconverters
  • Beautifully built and well sealed
  • Easily removable tripod collar
  • Very portable design
  • Extremely fast and accurate autofocus
  • Very low focus breathing
  • Extremely sharp across the zoom range
  • Very low vignette
  • Beautiful color
  • Excellent bokeh
  • Mostly good flare resistance
  • Low aberrations

Cons:

  • Tripod foot isn’t ARCA-compatible
  • Pincushion distortion throughout the zoom range

 

Purchase the Sony 70-200mm F4 Macro G II @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada  | Sony Canada  | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

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Keywords:  Sony, Sony 70-200mm, 70-200mm, F4, G, OSS, Macro, II, Sony 70-200 II Review, FE 70-200mm F4 Macro G OSS II, 1.4x, TC, Full Frame, Review, Sony Alpha 1, Sony a7IV, Sony a7RV, Review, Hands On, Dustin Abbott, Real World, Comparison, Sharpness, Bokeh, Flare Resistance, Autofocus, Image Quality, Sample Images, Video, Photography, Sony a9, Sony A1, let the light in, #letthelightin, DA

DISCLAIMER: This article and description contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Sony 70-200mm F4 Macro G OSS II Image Gallery

Dustin Abbott

July 12th, 2023

Sony just keeps hitting one home run after another.  Their newest lens – the Sony FE 70-200mm F4 Macro G OSS II (or SEL70200G II) – is one of the most versatile telephoto lenses I’ve ever used.  Perhaps that’s why the name has to be so long; this lens does a LOT of things.  It covers the popular 70-200mm focal range, which covers from this:

to this at 200mm:

It delivers 1:2 macro all across the zoom range, allowing you to get ever closer as you move from 200mm towards 70mm, allowing you to get beautiful macro-like shots…like this one of tiny budding blackberries.

What’s unique about this is that it gives you a lot of different framing options, and the ability to get slightly different macro style shots at different focal lengths – not to mention the flexibility for video footage as you don’t really have to work about getting too close to the camera.  It has updated OSS (Optical Steady Shot), which further enhances the ability to get stable video and photos without the need of a tripod.  It’s smaller and lighter than the first generation 70-200mm F4, but unlike the Canon RF 70-200mm F4, it retains the ability to use teleconverters…which also allows you to get even higher macro performance (0.75x with a 1.4x TC [shown below] and 1:1 macro with a 2.0x TC).

The Tamron 35-150mm F2-2.8 VXD has stood out to me as being perhaps the most versatile lens on the Sony platform, and in some ways that’s still true (focal range and aperture), but this new Sony 70-200mm F4 Macro G is even more versatile in other ways.  This is an incredibly useful lens that can do a lot of things well…and it might mean that you skip buying a macro and use this lens for even more things.  Should the 70-200G II go to the top of your wishlist?   You can judge for yourself by either watching my video review below or reading my text review, or just enjoy the photos below.

 

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Thanks to Sony USA for sending me a pre-release review loaner of this lens. As always, this is a completely independent review. *The tests and most of the photos that I share as a part of my review cycle have been done with the Sony a7RV along with the Sony Alpha 1 that serve as my benchmark cameras for Sony lenses.

Photos of the Sony 70-200G II

Photos Taken with the Sony 70-200G II

 

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Keywords:  Sony, Sony 70-200mm, 70-200mm, F4, G, OSS, Macro, II, Sony 70-200 II Review, FE 70-200mm F4 Macro G OSS II, 1.4x, TC, Full Frame, Review, Sony Alpha 1, Sony a7IV, Sony a7RV, Review, Hands On, Dustin Abbott, Real World, Comparison, Sharpness, Bokeh, Flare Resistance, Autofocus, Image Quality, Sample Images, Video, Photography, Sony a9, Sony A1, let the light in, #letthelightin, DA

DISCLAIMER: This article and description contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Tamron 17-70mm F2.8 Di III-A VC RXD X-Mount Gallery

Dustin Abbott

July 11th, 2023

In January 2021 I released my review of this lens for Sony E-mount cameras.  At the time, no Tamron lenses were available on Fuji X-mount, and I spoke in my conclusion about how a lens like the Tamron 17-70mm F2.8 Di III-a VC RXD actually gave Sony an advantage – it’s the kind of lens I call a “system seller”.  On paper it has pretty much everything:  a great focal range (25.5-105mm full frame equivalent), a large maximum aperture through the zoom range (F2.8), optical stabilization (Vibration Compensation, or VC), and a fast focus system (RXD).  But that advantage is no longer on Sony alone, as this was one of the first lenses to come to Fuji X-mount from Tamron once Fuji began opening up their platform to third party lenses.  That’s an amazing focal range to have a constant aperture of F2.8 over, covering from this at 17mm:

…to this at 70mm:

It also is a great value.  The current price at B&H Photo is $699 USD, which is a full $500 cheaper than the Fujinon XF 16-55mm F2.8 LM WR (my review here) or $200 less than the Fujinon XF 18-120mm F4 PZD (my review coming soon).  The Tamron doesn’t perfectly align with either of those lenses, but they are the closest competitors I can point to on the platform.  Sigma has also made their 18-50mm F2.8 DC available on Fuji X-mount (my review here), but the main reasons to consider the Sigma would be price ($549 USD) and compact size as the Tamron 17-70mm VC has the advantage in focal range, weather sealing, and also includes an optical stabilizer.  I’ve been interested in revisiting some of these third party lenses on X-mount for two primary reasons:  1) to see how autofocus performs on a new platform and 2) to see how the lens’ optics survive the very pixel dense 40MP Fuji X-Trans sensor on some of their new cameras. 

I found the 17-70mm VC a little big for the Sony a6400 body that I reviewed it on previously, but my Fujifilm X-H2 (my review here) is more like a full frame camera is size and the lens is a perfect fit on the X-H2.

Tamron loves its initials in their lens names, so let’s sort out that alphabet soup.  Di III is their designation for a mirrorless lens design, and, in this case, the addition of -A at the (Di III-A) refers to their development for APS-C mirrorless.  VC is Vibration Compensation, which is Tamron’s name for their proprietary OIS (image stabilization) system.  It’s worth noting that neither of the Fuji alternatives (both of which cost more) come with built in stabilization.  RXD refers to the focus motor, which is similar to the linear motors employed on many of Fuji’s better lenses.  In short, this lens is pretty loaded with quality features under its skin even if there aren’t a lot of external features on the barrel.  

So does the Tamron 17-70mm F2.8 VC RXD impress me as much on Fuji as it did on Sony?  You can watch my conclusions in my video review below, read my text review here, or just enjoy the photos.

 

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Thanks to Tamron USA for sending me an loaner of the lens.  As always, this is a completely independent review.  I have used both my personal Fujifilm X-H2 (my review here) and a loaner of the X-S20 (my review here) for this review.

Photos of the Tamron 17-70mm VC X-Mount

Photos Taken with the Tamron 17-70mm VC X-mount

Gear Used:

Purchase the Tamron 17-70mm F2.8 RXD @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Tamron 11-20mm F2.8 RXD @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada |  Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Fujifilm X-S20 @ B&H Photo | Adorama  | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany | Ebay 

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Purchase the Fujifilm X-T5 @ B&H Photo | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Find it Used at KEH 

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Keywords: Tamron 17-70mm F2.8 RXD, withmytamron, X-Mount, X, Fuji, Fujifilm, X-H2, weather sealing, B060, Tamron 17-70 RXD, RXD, VC, Tamron 17-70mm F2.8 VC VXD, F2.8, 17-70mm, Di-IIIa, Sony, E-mount, Tamron 17-70mm Review, Tamron 17-70 review, Review,  Hands On, Dustin Abbott, Real World, Comparison, Sharpness, Autofocus, Image Quality, Sample Images, Video, Photography, Astrophotography, #letthelightin, #DA, #weather sealing

DISCLAIMER: This article and description contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.