Pues nada, que va el bueno de Ken Rockwell y ayudado de su palmera y de su nuevo reloj Casio nos cuenta las virtudes del Fuji XF 80mm f/2.8 Macro R LM OIS WR ASPH puesto delante de una Fuji X-T30.
Yo simplemente os lo cuento y os pongo lo de siempre para esta californiana y soleada WEB.
Good
- Flawless optics, like most macro lenses made the past 50 years.
- Manual focus is very precise, perfect for focusing magnified images as we often do in macro.
- Optical Image Stabilization, rated 5 stops.
- Weather resistant.
- Works with the Fujifilm XF 1.4x Teleconverter and Fujifilm XF 2x Teleconverter.
Bad
- The exotic ceramic-bearing linear focus mechanism doesn’t lock or cage with power off or with the lens not mounted on a camera, so it all flops around as you handle the lens. It feels like there’s a something flopping around inside, and there is: the focus groups.
- Made with more plastic than most of Fujinon’s XF lenses.
- It’s great that it has a big, metal aperture ring, but it’s heavily-damped making it difficult to feel for clicks.
Missing
Non-compensating diaphragm: the effective f/stop changes as focused at macro distances. This is only significant for manual non-TTL exposures. This means that the maximum aperture always reads the same (like f/2.8), even though you may lose a stop of light or more at 1:1. Other lenses compensate and always transmit as much light as the indicated aperture suggests, but that also means that those other lenses may only indicate a maximum of f/5 at 1:1. No worries, you won’t notice this unless you’re shooting with external light meters or shooting with manual flash or strobes.
Podréis observar los átomos que componen el reloj de Ken en: