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Old 02-11-2009, 03:26 PM
irene67 irene67 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by inkista View Post
Can you still return it?

You basically want to hold off purchasing anything camera-related close to March or September, since that's when most of the camera product announcements happen and often when rebate programs begin. Usually March, because of PMA (although it was February last year). September because of Photokina (in even numbered years; or just ramping up for the holiday season).

As for performance, the f/1.8's looking nicer. Here's the MTF for the 35/2:



And here's the one for the upcoming 35/1.8


If you don't know how to read an MTF chart, Nikon's (unlike Canon's) tend to only be done at wide-open performance, so all the data is of the first lens set to f/2, and the second set to f/1.8. This is likely where the performance is weakest, btw.

The horizontal scale is distance from the center of the frame. The center of the frame is at 0 (the left edge), and the distance from that is given in millimeters. You'll note that the FX-designed lens goes out farther, so you may want to ignore anything to the right of 15 on the chart for the 35/2. The vertical scale is the contrast modulation--how much of the light is getting through the lens. Air would be a horizontal line at 1.

The red lines are at lower-contrast (10 line/mm), the blue ones at higher-contrast (30 lines/mm). The higher up the chart the red lines are, the better the contrast of the lens is. The higher up the blue lines are, the better the subjective sharpness (resolution) is. The solid lines are Sagittal, the dashed Meridional (basically, diagonal lines in different directions). The closer the solid and dashed lines are, the smoother the bokeh will be. The flatter the line, the better the performance is across the frame.

Now, remember, this isn't the whole story. Chromatic aberration, flare resistance, distortion, etc. are not measured by an MTF. But it's certainly looking like the new 35/1.8 is a nice little lens.
Nope - can't return it. I got it through an Amazon Marketplace seller. Oh well, nothing I can do about it now!

And no, it isn't an AF-S. I am still unfamiliar with some lens terminology. What exactly does AF-S mean?

It just seems strange that the 1.8, which offers a built in motor AND is obviously faster than the 2.0, can be OVER $100 cheaper than the 35 f/2.0. It just makes me think there is something I'm missing...there just HAS to be something better about 2.0. I mean, if there isn't, why didn't Nikon introduce the lens at a premium to the 2.0? The new 50 1.4G was introduced at a premium to the 50 f/1.4, right?

What am I missing???? Seems like strange marketing.
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Nikon D80, Nikkor 35 f/2.0, 50 f/1.8 and 55 - 200 VR
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