Full review of the Sony NEX 30mm F/3.5 macro lens.
The included goofy hood with cinematic slit is designed to be attached all the time, and has filter threads cut into the hood, so you can easily attach a 49mm filter. The hood is plastic, so don’t over tighten the filter or you’ll strip the threads. You can also put the cap on the hood, as seen in the shot above.
For some odd reason, Sony has omitted ‘optical SteadyShot’ in this macro lens, one only can wonder why.
The Sony 30mm F/3.5 macro lens has seven elements in six groups. Sony uses three aspherics and one ‘ED’ element inside. Made in China.
Fit and finish are very good. The lens appears to be clad in high quality plastic and metal, (Sony says ‘aluminum alloy”) and has a metal mount, but it’s very light-weight. Filter size is 49mm, just like most NEX lenses to date.
Requisite product shots.
Side shot with odd hood |
Back side |
Hood and front element close up |
Sony X-ray view and MTF chart |
General information and specifications.
Lens
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Sony NEX 30mm F/3.5 macro SEL30M35
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Box contents
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Front cap, rear cap, hood (ALC-SH113), and user’s manual.
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Cost
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Approximately $278
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Build quality
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Very good.
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Additional information
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Made for Sony NEX cameras, won’t work on A-mount cameras.
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Specifications below |
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Optical configuration
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7 elements in 6 groups
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Angle of view
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50˚ Equivalent to about 45mm in full frame (135 format) terms.
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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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Sony NEX only.
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Depth of field and focus scales?
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Nothing.
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Minimum focus, image plane to subject
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About 3.84″ (95mm)
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Minimum focus, end of lens barrel to subject
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About .87″ (22mm) from front of lens hood; and 1″ or (30mm) from the lens barrel to subject.
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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.
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Focus ring turns in AF?
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No
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Filter size
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49mm.
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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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1:1 or 1.0x
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Min. F/stop
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F/22
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Sony teleconverter compatible?
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No
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Length changes when zooming?
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N/A
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Dimensions WxL (my measurements)
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2.17″ x 2.45″ 55mm x 62mm.
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Maximum extended length (my measurements)
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2.56″ (65mm) measured with the lens hood attached, lens does not actually extend.
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Weight bare (my scale)
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4.9oz, (138g) bare, 5.3oz (150g) with hood attached.
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almost flat |
Distortion is not a problem with this lens, it’s basically flat.
Bokeh samples.
F/3.5
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F/5.6
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Bokeh at F/3.5 has a slight outer band and inner ring, but stopping down to F/5.6 produces a smoother blur. Apertures of F/5.6 and smaller show heptagons from the aperture blades. These crops show bokeh at a distance of about 30′ (9m) when focused at 6′ (2.0m).
Light fall-off
F/3.5 close focus
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F/3.5 infinity focus
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There is not much of a problem with light fall-off or ‘corner shading’ with this lens. What you see in the close focus shot is a reduction in light gathering power from the focusing design of the macro lens, that’s the way almost all macro lenses work. It’s about a half stop, or an effective aperture of F/4.2 at close focus. At F/5.6, there is no noticeable light fall-off at any focusing distance. Using the hood with a regular thick filter produces no additional light fall-off.
Flare and Ghosting
Magenta blob, middle right, sun inside frame, F/5.6
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Magenta blob, sun outside of frame, F/5.6
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Let’s check out the close-focus capabilities of this lens.
Full image showing crop area.
Sample crops from the centers, mid-sections and corners.
Center
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Mid-section
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Corner
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F/3.5
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F/5.6
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F/8
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F/11
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The centers and mid-sections look good at F/3.5, and sharpen up nicely at F/5.6. The corners don’t seem to respond to closing the aperture, they’re mushy all the time. The sides of the image at F/3.5-5.6 are soft about 1000 pixels from the edge, (at the half way point) but sharpen up nicely at F/8. Maximum performance seems to be around F/5.6 in the centers, F/5.6 in the mid-sections, F/8 at the sides, and pick any aperture you want for the best, (or worst) corners. Landscapers use F/8 for the best overall image. Exposure differences are from light fall-off.
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