Lens
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SAL-2875 Sony 28-75mm F2.8 SAM
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Box contents
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Front and rear caps, user’s manual, and hood.
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Cost
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$898 retail
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Build quality
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Good
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Additional information
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New Sony design introduced late in 2009. Similar to the Konica Minolta 28-75mm F/2.8 (D) and the Tamron 28-75mm F/2.8.
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Specifications below |
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Optical configuration
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16 elements in 14 groups
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Angle of view
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75°-32° full frame, 54°-21° APS-C.
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Aperture
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7 blades, curved
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Full frame and APS-C
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Yes, full frame and APS-C. APS-C equivalent, 42-112.5mm
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Depth of field and focus scales?
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Focus distance indicators.
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Minimum focus, image plane to subject
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15″ (380mm)
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Minimum focus, end of lens barrel to subject
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6.65″ (169mm)
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Hard stop at infinity focus?
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No
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Length changes when focusing?
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No |
Focus ring turns in AF?
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Yes
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Filter size
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67mm
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Filter ring rotates?
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No
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Distance encoder?
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Yes
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Max magnification
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0.22x, or 1:4.5
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Min. F/stop
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F/32
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Sony teleconverter compatible?
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No
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Length changes when zooming?
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Yes
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Dimensions WxL (my measurements)
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3.1″ x 3.7″ 78mm x 94mm. Add 1.5mm in width for AF/MF switch or zoom lock.
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Maximum extended length (my measurements)
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5.04″ (128mm)
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Weight bare (my scale)
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19.6oz (557g) 20.7oz (587g) with caps
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Box and contents |
Side view |
Side shot fully extended |
Front element |
Backside |
Sony X-ray view and MTF chart |
28mm, moderate barrel distortion. |
Almost flat at 35mm. |
75mm, very mild pincushion distortion. |
28mm F/2.8
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28mm F/4
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75mm F/2.8
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75mm F/4
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When viewed closely, you can see the multi-rings in the out-of-focus highlights, fortunately, the outer ring is rendered somewhat smooth, and looks decent when viewed at normal screen sizes.
Real bokeh shot below.
The full image directly above shows real world background blur focused close at F/5.6, 75mm, and looks smoother when viewed in this way, instead of the 100% crops. You can see the aperture shape starting to show up at F/5.6. This is a shot from the A900.
Lens flare/ghosting examples
28mm F/5.6, ghosting.
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28mm F/5.6 sun centered.
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50mm F/5.6
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75mm F/5.6
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75mm F/5.6 sun just out of shot.
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75mm F/5.6, sun blocked by hand.
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28mm F/2.8
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28mm F/4
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75mm F/2.8
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75mm F/4
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F/2.8 center
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F/2.8 corner
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F/4 center
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F/4 corner
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F/5.6 center
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F/5.6 corner
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F/8 center
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F/8 corner
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F/11 center
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F/11 corner
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The centers at 28mm, F/2.8 are pretty sharp, and closing the aperture more doesn’t seem to add much sharpness. The corners are soft at F/2.8, but sharpen up reasonably at F/4, and smaller apertures don’t help past F/5.6.
Below are centers and corners from 75mm.
F/2.8 center
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F/2.8 corner
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F/4 center
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F/4 corner
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F/5.6 center
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F/5.6 corner
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F/8 center
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F/8 corner
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F/11 center
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F/11 corner
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Full frame section next.
Full frame results using the Sony A900 below.
Check out the differences when using a film or full frame camera below. I’m only pointing out the noticeable issues as compared to the APS-C bodies, so if I don’t show it here, the results are not significantly different enough to warrant posting an additional set of images in this section.
Light fall-off
Light fall-off is definitely stronger with full frame coverage. I see moderate to heavy levels at both the extremes, however, by closing the aperture one stop, things clear up nicely. Regular filters cause no noticeable additional light fall-off.
Full image below illustrating light fall-off from A900.
This full scene of my backyard shows light fall-off from 28mm, F/2.8, 1250sec, ISO 200. It’s really not noticeable, and certainly not distracting in my opinion.
Lens flare/ghosting samples.
Noticeable above is the additional ghosting with full frame coverage. This stuff is visible in the viewfinder, so just pay attention, although there’s nothing you can do when the sun or other bright light is inside the image. The top row shows ghosting when the sun is in the image. In the bottom row are samples with the sun just outside the image. All samples above show the entire image, and are not cropped.
Color fringing crops below.
The full frame 28mm, F/5.6 crop (top) shows mild color fringing, and was taken from the last 700 pixels of the image on the middle right side. Color fringing is most noticeable at the wide end, but isn’t very distracting in my opinion, and remember, this is a 100% crop. The lower shot is from 75mm on the far left side of the image, (also a 100% crop) and color fringing is fairly mild. This is lateral color fringing which occurs along the sides of the image, and doesn’t go away as you stop down. I see no axial CA at any aperture.
28mm corner samples next.
The 28mm full frame corners look pretty soft wide open, but they do sharpen up gradually, and by F/8-11 they actually look good. I threw in a center shot comparison, just to show you the difference between the centers and extreme corners. Notice the color fringing in the crops. Exposure differences between the center and corners crops are from light fall-off. Crops taken from the last 300 pixels at the lower left corner.
75mm corners below.
The 75mm full frame corners are soft at all apertures, but seem best by a hair at F/11. Crops taken from the last 250 pixels from the lower left corner. Exposure differences are from light fall-off.
Distortion next
I see moderate wave-type barrel distortion at 28mm, becoming flat around 35-40mm. The full frame barrel distortion never really gets perfectly flat if you try to fix it using standard distortion tools. As you near 75mm, moderate pincushion distortion shows up, and the curve here is gradual and even across the frame, making it easy to correct in post processing.
Coma results below.
Coma is mild to moderate in the extreme corners at 28mm, F/2.8-4, and gone by F/5.6.
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Overall, I’m impressed with the new Sony 28-75mm F/2.8 lens. It’s sharp in the centers at F/2.8 at the wide end, and the corners sharpen up reasonably at F/5.6. The long end is a little soft in the centers at F/2.8, but sharpens up at F/4, the corners look decent, but not great at F/8-11. Distortion is about average, as is ghosting control and light fall-off. Color fringing is not very noticeable at the long end, and control at the wide end is about average. Bokeh looks similar to other less expensive wide zooms from Sony and Minolta, that is to say it looks somewhat harsh if you look very closely, but at standard viewing sizes it appears neutral.
For APS-C users; although this lens works fine on an APS-C camera, the equivalent focal length of 42-112.5mm is a little long for me. You may be better served with the Sony 16-50mm F/2.8 SSM, Tamron 17-50mm F/2.8, or the one stop slower CZ 16-80mm.