Contax Vario-Sonnar T* 70-200mm f3.5-4.5 35mm Zoom

Contax Vario-Sonnar T* 70-200mm f3.5-4.5 35mm Zoom 

DESCRIPTION

The compact size and zooming range for this lens makes it the perfect companion to the Carl Zeiss N Vario-Sonnar T* 28-80mm f3.5-5.6 lens and the combination of the two lenses provides a focal range of 28mm to 200mm. When mated to the Contax NX, these two lenses work to create the perfect compact and lightweight system.

USER REVIEWS

Showing 1-2 of 2  
[May 30, 2002]
Casual

Strength:

Light in weight and handy compared with N300-70mm. Very good optical quality and colour balance. Very solid structure, only one tube extension while zooming instead of two tubes extension like N70-300mm, it gives me more tough feeling in constriction. Relatively larger aperature F3.5~4.5, half stop faster compared with similar zoom range lenses

Weakness:

Unlike N24-85mm, N70-200mm need to turn off the switch on the lens from AF to MF when using MF focus, less convenient. AF speed is still slow compared with Canon USM and nikon AFS.

Its cost HK$3500 and is half of the N70-300mm, very attractive for contax user, but of course not price competitive compared with similar lenses of other Japanese brands. It produce sharper image than N24-85mm and also N50mm F1.4, really surprise to me.

Customer Service

Nil

Similar Products Used:

N70-300mm F4.5~5.6, nikon AF 70-300mm F4~5.6 ED, Canon EF70-200mm F4. Pentax AF 80-320mm F4.5-5.6, Pentax A 70-210mm F4.

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
5
[May 01, 2002]
Vince Farnsworth
Expert

Strength:

Sharp, abberation-free optics Relatively light-weight Relatively affordable

Weakness:

No full-time manual focus override as in the 24-85N.

My wife and I use this lens as part of her Contax NX system. She also has the 24-85N lens. I have tested most of the Zeiss 200 mm lenses including the manual focus 200 f/4, 80-200 f/4 and the 200 f/3.5 (the latter was my choice for my manual focus Contax system). This new 70-200 f/3.5-4.5N is probably the best of the bunch. It has no chromatic abberations (color fringing) at any focal length, even at the edge of the field and distortion is very low (couldn''t see any). Also, there is almost no vignetting wide open at full zoom (a bit of light fall-off at full aperture, but very little). The older manual-focus 80-200 f/4 zoom has significant vignetting and fall-off under the same conditions. The resolution of the new lens looks very high at all focal lengths and is good even wide open. Stopping down helps more at the extreme corners of the frame. The color and saturation are extremely good, even compared to the 24-85N. Focusing is a little noisier than with the 24-85N but about the same speed, which is good but not quite as fast as the latest Canon offerings, for example. You have to move a switch on the lens to go between auto and manual focus (no full-time manual focus override). There is no zoom creep and the zooming action is smooth but a bit on the stiff side. The manual focusing feel is well damped. The lens is fairly light-weight and balances well on the NX. Overall, another winner from the Zeiss N zoom designers. Testing was done with Fuji Velvia slide film with the NX camera mounted on a sturdy tripod. Subjects ranged from scenics to portraits to still lifes to closeups using auxillary lenses (Canon 500D). Slides were examined with loupes on a color-balanced light box and under a 15X microscope.

Customer Service

NA

Similar Products Used:

Contax 200 mm f/3.5 AE Contax 200 mm f/4.0 AE Contax 80-200 mm f/4.0 MM zoom Canon 200 mm f/2.8L

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
Showing 1-2 of 2  

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