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Forums > Back > next PZ lens test report - Sigma 14mm f/1.8 DG HSM ART
#41
Quote:I'm baffled, seriously. What else are the MTF charts there for?
 

To know about a specific lens - sensor - converter cmbination. I'm aware that with your prehistoric RAW converter from 2011 and my C1 10 and soon 11 from these days, the results already will be different. And you two guys keep on with your sermon that we readers cannot cross compare lenses - which is a fact. But we also cannot tell about a lens (some even without optical rating, others with rating - alone that is not very useful if you look at some Canon 5D "R" tests) which performs well at 21 MP how it will behave at around 50 MP. So, to me the MTF numbers are only telling something within a system, but fail as an absolute scale. Which is what lenscore provides provided (their last test was from months ago)

 

Quote:And what does this rating tell you if you want to know how the lens performs on a sensor that is very different?

Telling me? Nothing of relevance. To my own decisions your ratings do not matter. Your findings and charts do matter, but the rest... And what also does matter - and I repeat myself because you two testers don't care much about USB docks and consequently the improvements these docks can give the lens in cooperation with a certain AF module - is the possible customization of DSLR lenses which no first party DSLR manufacturer has to offer.

 

 

Quote:I'm not sure why you keep coming back to this single point. Each lens is tested and judged across the whole specification set it offers. The Nikkor starts at f/2.8, and it is fairly great at its largest aperture already.
 

I come back to this point because either there is a comparable rating system with transparent rules or two guys are throwing in some decorative stars  Big Grin I'm fine with both. Please don't feel offended but when I'm researching about a lens, PZ/OL is only one address and not the most important to me.

 

Quote:The Sigma starts with a bigger aperture, and thus is rated across a larger aperture range. At f/1.8, it shows weaknesses at the borders and corners. Which, by the way, I think can even be seen in the full res sample you posted (the lady at the lake). I don't find the border anyhow impressive in there and think they match the findings quite well.
 

The lady was out of focus (although not willingly) the walls opposite the river are sharper in my memory. I understand your remark that way that wide open lenses will always have a handicap compared to less wide open lenses. This is one disadvantage of this kind of rating: Most wide open lenses perform as well or better at f/2.8 or f/4. The slow lenses cannot be faster, but the wide open ones can be stopped down. Therefore a comparison works between wide open OR less wide open, but not a wide open compared to a less open one. You rated the Nikkor on a 24 MP camera - I see the pictures with 45 MP and am surprised about sharp borders. Wide open, that is. This weekend - if the weather allows it - I can compare both lenses on the same camera. Maybe I'm wrong, and the Nikkor is still better, but at the moment it looks the other way.

 

Quote:If a lens offers a large aperture, we expect it to be great across the frame at that setting to receive a great rating,, when it comes to MTF, it's as simple as that.
 

Rubbish. At least speaking of an ultra wide angle lens, just show me a single picture where you take a picture of something with a perfectly flat focus area which needs to be sharp across the frame - test charts are an exception, no real life  :lol: If you need sharpness across the frame you also need best ISO, lowest vibration and a possibility to adjust the frame carefully. That all points towards a good tripod and then it doesn't matter to stop down for max resolution.

 

Quote:Beside: looking at the available data, I still have doubts the Sigma matches the Nikkor at 14/2.8

And I cannot or will not say it matches unless I can prove it. But if I can prove it, the next beer is on you. [Image: drinb27x24.gif]

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#42
Quote:To be honest, seeing how much effort you put into arguing against the rating in this particular case, one might get a slightly different impression Wink
 

Doubting a rating and caring about are two different things. Now I turn around the bad "imputation": Rating down a Sigma UWA and giving no rating for a Canon UWA zoom can be interpretetd as some kind of tendency...

 

Just kidding...

 

:lol:

 

I'm sure the Canon is 5 stars, no doubt. Has to be, because these days it's so super easy to polish an UWA.

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#43
Quote:But we also cannot tell about a lens (some even without optical rating, others with rating - alone that is not very useful if you look at some Canon 5D "R" tests) which performs well at 21 MP how it will behave at around 50 MP. So, to me the MTF numbers are only telling something within a system, but fail as an absolute scale.
And that's the issue: there is no absolute scale. Lenses perform differently on different sensors. You can see it in the reviews where you can caompare 50MP and 21 MP results. You will also see it in the upcoming reviews of the Nikkor AF-S 24/1.8: it will have a fairly high rating on the D3x, but a lower one on the D7200. Knowing an "absolute" scale does not tell you anything about how a lens performs on a particular camera.

We do system tests, by design, and by choice. And we're not trying to hide it.

Quote:Telling me? Nothing of relevance. To my own decisions your ratings do not matter. Your findings and charts do matter, but the rest... And what also does matter - and I repeat myself because you two testers don't care much about USB docks and consequently the improvements these docks can give the lens in cooperation with a certain AF module - is the possible customization of DSLR lenses which no first party DSLR manufacturer has to offer.
To each his own. Personally, true, I don't care much about the USB docks. Nor the adjustment options in-camera. Maybe I'm just lucky, but with the majority of the lenses I've handled over the recent years, I haven't had AF issues. At least none I could reliably blame on either lens or camera.
 
Quote:Please don't feel offended but when I'm researching about a lens, PZ/OL is only one address and not the most important to me.
Not offended at all. In fact that's what we have been advising readers more than once in the past: there's more than one opinion out there, and procedure and priorities are different. Never rely on one review, especially if your priorities are different from the reviewer's.
 
Quote:Rubbish. At least speaking of an ultra wide angle lens, just show me a single picture where you take a picture of something with a perfectly flat focus area which needs to be sharp across the frame - test charts are an exception, no real life  :lol:
Not rubbish. If I shoot with the main subject not at the image center (not that uncommon), I'd like to be able to judge what level of sharpness I can expect off-center. Of course I don't shoot flat objects at f/1.8 (outside of the lab) 


Quote:And I cannot or will not say it matches unless I can prove it. But if I can prove it, the next beer is on you. [Image: drinb27x24.gif]
Deal Wink

Wish I had more time, because I'm actually heading to Geneva right now, but I'm on a tight schedule unfortunately. Would have been a great opportunity otherwise... because a 14-24 is traveling with me Wink
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#44
I take my own 14-24 if you don't mind  Big Grin but there's this gorgeous 135/1.8 here which - contrary to the 14/1.8 hasn't fell down and broke a part of the thermally (but not fallingly...) stable front hood. Well, the lens and camera took it better than the wooden floor  :unsure:

Quote: 

 

Not rubbish. If I shoot with the main subject not at the image center (not that uncommon), I'd like to be able to judge what level of sharpness I can expect off-center. Of course I don't shoot flat objects at f/1.8 (outside of the lab) 
 

Sure, because each DSLR can focus right down the corners  ^_^

 

Alright, alright "use LiveView for Zeiss' sake" would be the appropriate answer. Got it. But will rip apart the Nikkor anyway. Ha.

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#45
Ouch!

Hope it's just the hood that took some damage... which is probably annoying enough.

I happen to have a visible damage in the floor of my corridor, too, where my Berlebach tripod hit it recently when falling over... luckily without a camera mounted.

I sent you an email regarding the 135... I'm afraid we have to postpone that to next year...
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opticallimits.com

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#46
The damage of the hood is cosmetical and with acrylic cyano (super)glue (?) it's fixed. I'm a bit worried about AF-module and lens movement, but so far it's a tiny doubt - everything appears to work alright (within the limits, which I saw before as well). I just still don't know how it could happen, but the bang was clear enough to know it happened. 30 years ago that would have been the start of a massive depression, these days "it's only a tool".

 

E-Mail is answered, no problem, I will not sell it in the next few years...   Smile

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#47
Alright... the "What does this mean ?" popup seen at the end of every review isn't working. Looks like the page the link points to is not there. Smile It's the same in every review I've checked.

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#48
I made a reply with some comparisons between the Sigma 14/1.8 and the Nikon 14-24/2.8 in another thread.

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#49
Quote: 

Rubbish. At least speaking of an ultra wide angle lens, just show me a single picture where you take a picture of something with a perfectly flat focus area which needs to be sharp across the frame - test charts are an exception, no real life  :lol: If you need sharpness across the frame you also need best ISO, lowest vibration and a possibility to adjust the frame carefully. That all points towards a good tripod and then it doesn't matter to stop down for max resolution.
 

Night sky. Stars in the corners. People don't buy a giant 14/1.8 to shoot brick walls at f/11.
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#50
It does well with that night sky.

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