with Warranty from croma, its trusted service.
Manufacturer: Nikon
with Warranty from croma, its trusted service.
Compact size, good for indoor lighting. Use on Nikon D7000
Compact size, good for indoor lighting; Use on Nikon D7000
Auto focus is very slow
I picked up a copy of the ubiquitous Nikon 50mm F/1.8 prime lens over the weekend and tried my hand at forced manual focusing on the D40 body. For the first hour or so, I had a hell of a time, trying to gauge the focus through the viewfinder without any additional help.
I had a D80 with 18-135 and 70-300 VR. I bought this lens to use mostly in museums where flash is not allowed also to use it with Nikon CLS system with my SD600 flash. I also own older lenses and Nikon bodies. I used 50 f/2 AI and 50 f/1.4 AI on my D80 before.
This is a very sharp lens even at f/1.8; At f/1.8 the DOF is very shallow so nailing the focus is very important; In my opinion some of the complaints of softness come from the unfocused results; It is hard to focus in dim places and at night inside homes.
It is very weakly built; It gives a lot of resistance when screwing the lens compared to smooth operation of 18-135 or 70-300VR
This lens is a little gem! It's pretty soft wide open, but gets better quickly stopped down, and better means excellent here. This little 50mm lens is one of Nikon's sharpest lenses, though the AFS f/1.4 version might allow for a little more sharpness at f/1.8.
*very* sharp stopped down (f/4) - inexpensive - small - lightweight
- soft wide open
I've recently accquired this lens for use with my Nikon D40. The Nikon 50mm f1.8 is the cheapest lens in the Nikon lineup, but it is also one of the sharpest. The lens is able to shoot at apertures ranging from f1.8 to f22, and with a minimum focusing distance of 0.5m.
Good quality and price.
I can still remember the sound of the AF while its hunting the subject- i listened it much. Under f/2.2 it was sharp as plastic bag covered with snot but at 2.2 and above it was quite good.
Cheap; good iq when stopped down
AF inconstancy; lack of sharpness when opened
All upcoming tests will be performed using a Nikon D200, a 10MP APS-C DSLR with a 1.5x cropping factor. The field-of-view of the Nikkor is equivalent to 75mm on classic full frame SLRs so the standard lens is transformed to a moderate tele lens within this scope.
While its wide-open performance leaves a bit to be desired, it's hard not to commend this lens for its performance based solely on its price point. Stop it down to ƒ/2.8 and it provides excellent results; by ƒ/8, it's one of the sharpest lenses we've tested.
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