Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

Here's a brief look at the Sony DT 18-70mm F/3.5-5.6 zoom lens. Scroll down for the review.

Lens

SAL1870 Sony DT 18-70mm F/3.5-5.6 zoom lens

Box contents

Front and rear caps, hood and users manual.

Cost

$199 retail by itself, or $100 as part of kit. No longer available from Sony.

Build quality

OK to Good

Additional information

Basic kit lens with select camera bodies.

Specifications below

Optical configuration

11 elements in 9 groups

Angle of view

76°-23°

Aperture

7 blades, circular

Full frame and APS-C

APS-C, 35mm equivalent, 27-105mm. Will give full coverage on full frame cameras between 24-70mm, but APS-C size capt. will auto crop your images using the A900.

Depth of field and focus scales?

Nothing

Minimum focus, image plane to subject

14.4" (366mm)

Minimum focus, end of lens barrel to subject

7.9" (201mm)

Hard stop at infinity focus?

No

Length changes when focusing?

Yes

Focus ring turns in AF?

Yes, lens barrel itself

Filter size

55mm

Filter ring rotates?

Yes, lens barrel itself

Distance encoder?

Yes

Max magnification

0.25x

Min. F/stop

F/22-36

Sony teleconverter compatible?

No

Length changes when zooming?

Yes

Dimensions W x L (my measurements)

2.6" x 3.0" 66mm x 77mm

Maximum extended length (my measurements)

3.7" (93mm)

Weight bare (my scale)

8.3oz (236g) 9.1oz (259g) with caps

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá
Side view fully drawn in, with included tiny hood

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá
Front element

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá
Rear shot, plastic mount

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá
Side shot fully extended

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá
X-ray view, Sony screen grab.

The Sony A700 was used for this review. For a better understanding of my review methods and terminology, go here.

This is the basic "kit" wide to telephoto zoom lens available for your Sony APS-C sensor camera, and isn't designed to be use on full frame/film cameras, but will work using APS-C size capt. on the A900. The lens is standard Sony satin black, with a wide rubber ribbed grip area around the zoom ring. Quality seem good, with a nice fit and finish, but the end of the lens barrel at full extension is a little wobbly, it doesn't effect the picture though. It has a plastic mount. This model is also a rebadged Konica Minolta lens from 2005, and says China, so I guess it's made in China. Sony says they use one asperical element and one "ED" element in the construction of the lens. It has a circular aperture, but when viewed wide open it doesn't look round, it has a couple of "bulges" disrupting the circle.

Zoom control is smooth and even, the barrel runs in and out at different lengths like most cheap kit lenses, and is fully drawn in at 35mm. It extends out a maximum of 5/8" (16mm) at 70mm. The focal length numbers are checked at; 18mm, 24mm, 28mm, 35mm, 50mm, and 70mm. The EXIF data is off at 28mm, reading 26mm, but that's no big deal, other readings match up fine.

Auto-focusing will be a little noisy for those of you used to the silent wave type motors, but it's mostly accurate and quick, though low light focusing is challenging at times, try spot focus, which seems to work better in low light. Manually focusing is tough, as you have a very short 1/8 turn from close-in to infinity. The filter ring turns when focusing so watch your grads and polarizers. These kit lenses aren't made for manual focusing. The closest focusing distance from lens barrel to subject is 7.9" or 201mm.

Aperture/focal length guide for the Sony DT 18-70mm F/3.5-5.6 This lens has one set of overlapping numbers, for instance; you can get F/4.5 or F/5 at 28mm, depending on tiny movements of the zoom ring, this is quite common. Look below for guide. Also, this lens miss-reads the marked 28mm length (reads 26mm) in the EXIF data, not a big deal, it's only off a hair.

Maximum aperture

F/3.5

F/4

F/4.5

F/5

F/5.6

Range

18mm

20mm-22mm

24mm-28mm

28mm - 30mm

35mm - 70mm

Flare and ghosting. Extremely good control here and one of the best in the Sony lineup. There's some two-prong flare going vertical through the sun at the wide end. This lens has little to no visible ghosting at any length. The lens comes with a tiny hood (replacement cost $15) and it really doesn't do any good, but then control is so good you don't need to use it.

This lens is multi-coated and has the regular green/magenta look.

Filter size. 55mm. This size is the most popular used on Sony lenses, others using this size are: 55-200mm, 50mm F/2.8 macro, 100mm F/2.8 macro, 35mmF/1.4, 50mm F/1.4 and the 75-300mm.

Filter use. There is no additional vignetting using a regular filter.

Coma. Light wide open, 18-28mm, one stop down and it's gone. No issues at 35-70mm. See crops below.

Color. Looks the same as other Sony lenses.

Close-up type filters. Works real good, +4 tested.

Lateral color fringing. Average, to below average control here. Stopping down doesn't help with this kind of color fringing. See small sample crop below.

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá
Moderate to strong barrel distortion. 18mm

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá
Light to moderate pincushion distortion at 70mm.

Barrel and pincushion distortion. The distortion at 18mm is moderate to strong. It disappears rapidly, and by 28mm, it's flat. From then on pincushion starts, and results in light to moderate distortion at 70mm. See pictures above.

Lens Bokeh. The Sony DT 18-70mm F/3.5-5.6 has a bit of a harsh background blur, especially towards the long end, similar to other wide zoom DT lenses, except the CZ 16-80mm. See sample crops below.

light fall-off, directly below. Mild at 18mm and F/3.5, stopping down helps out, but there isn't a problem even wide open. At the long end there is nothing. You can't see this stuff in real pictures, look at the small sample below. Very good control here for a kit lens, and much better than the Sony DT wide-super zooms.

18mm @ F/3.5

18mm @ F/5.6

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

70mm @ F/5.6

70mm @ F/8

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

Examples of light fall-off, color fringing and flare below.

18mm @ F/3.5 Light fall-off

18mm @ F/5.6 color fringing crop

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

18mm @ F/3.5 sun flare

18mm @ F/5.6 sun flare

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

The top left shot shows how light fall-off is not nearly as noticeable in real shots as it is in the grey samples. Plus, you don't need to shoot sunny daylight scenes using F/3.5. The right shot shows some rather strong color fringing, which you'll have to live with as this type of CA doesn't go away by stopping down the aperture. You can eliminate most of it with simple sliders in some photo imaging software. The two lower shots show the flare I was referring to earlier. There isn't much change as you stop down. It depends more on the sun's intensity and background. Many lenses do this, there just isn't much to show with this lens, so I thought I'd throw in something. It's no big deal, and doesn't show any veiling glare along with it, so that's good.

Random shots below.

18mm @ F/3.5 bokeh

18mm @ F/5.6 bokeh

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

70mm @ F/5.6 bokeh

70mm @ F/8 bokeh

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

18mm @ F/3.5 coma

18mm @ F/5 coma

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

Bokeh looks a little harsh at both ends, so slightly de-focused backgrounds may look busy. The long end is particularly annoying. The last row shows coma, and there isn't much of a problem here, just a small amount at 18-28mm with a wide open aperture, one stop down and there's nothing.

Corner softness.

18mm corners below.

18mm @ F/3.5

18mm @ F/5.6

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

18mm @ F/8

18mm @ F/11

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

50mm @ F/5.6

50mm @ F/8

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

70mm corners

70mm @ F/5.6

70mm @ F/11

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

The 18mm corners are soft, and stopping down helps much, F/8 looks good, though the images are sharpest At F/11. Up towards 50mm, the corners respond nicely to a stop down at F/8, basically the same as the centers. On the long end, the centers and corners are the same, and respond the same way when stopping down, I just wanted to put some samples in to back up my words. To sum up the corners, the wide end takes two or more stops to get sharp corners, from near 50mm to 70mm, the corners are nearly the same as the centers.

Center samples next.

18mm centers

18mm @ F/3.5

18mm @ F/4.5

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

18mm @ F/5.6

18mm @ F/8

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

50mm @ F/5.6

50mm @ F/8

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

70mm @ F/5.6

70mm @ F/8

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

70mm @ F/11

70mm @ blank

Sony lens 3.5-5.6 đánh giá

Intentionally left blank

Look at the boring center crops above. We'll start off at 18mm, where the F/3.5 shot is slightly soft, but 2/3 of a stop down at F/4.5 it sharpens up, and looks sharpest at F/5-5.6, that's good. On to 50mm, where the image is a little soft wide open at F/5.6, but sharpens up at F/8. The end of the zoom, (70mm and the bottom set of crops), looks pretty soft at F/5.6 and takes two stops down to sharpen up to its maximum. To sum up the centers on the wide end, there really aren't any problems, just fire away without worry. towards the long end, use one or two stops down for maximum sharpness, if you're using AUTO mode, the camera knows what apertures to use at each focal length to make the sharpest image (in good light) so you can enjoy taking pictures and not be concerned with sharpness and other things that have little to do with taking a good picture. Note: all corner and center shots above have been cropped from the original image and displayed at 100%

Check out the close focus shot.

Below, check out the sample (360kb) and click to see a 100% cropped portion of the full image. The sample shot was taken with the Sony A700 12.2MP camera. The subject is a standard US stamp, 1"x 3/4" or 25.4mm x 19mm. Also, note the macro shot was taken as close to the subject as focusing allowed; In this case, 7.9" or 201mm, measured from the front of the lens barrel to the subject.

This lens has a fairly large reproduction size at 0.25x. It did a good job, but at F/11, F/8 is good too, just not quite as sharp.