Nikon Nikkor Z 600 mm f/6.3 VR S
6. Distortion and field of view
Please Support UsIf you enjoy our reviews and articles, and you want us to continue our work please, support our website by donating through PayPal. The funds are going to be used for paying our editorial team, renting servers, and equipping our testing studio; only that way we will be able to continue providing you interesting content for free. |
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Field of view
A rectilinear 600 mm lens on a full frame should offer you an angle of view of 4.13 deg. The official Nikon specifications for the 6.3/600 model state a value of 4 degrees and 10 minutes of arc so 4.17 deg.The field of view of the Nikkor we measured very precisely as it should be done, for rays of light coming from infinity. Our measurements were based on photos of starry sky; then we transformed the pixel layout (X,Y) from the photo into the equatorial coordinate system (right ascension and declination), which locates a star on a celestial sphere. Our result amounts to 4.23 +\- 0.03 deg so is slightly bigger than the value from official specifications. Still, the difference is not that pronounced, reaching the 2-sigma limit, so there are no serious reasons to worry. If the field we measured is the real one it means the real focal length of the lens amounts to 586 mm and 2-3 percent derogation from the declared 600 mm remains completely acceptable.
Distortion
In this category we didn't expect any problems and indeed, there were no surprises here. For the APS-C/DX sensor distortion amounts to just +0.32% and it increases to +0.69% after passing to full frame. Both values are negligible and don't give you any reasons to complain.
Nikon Z7, 600 mm, JPEG, APS-C/DX, | |||
Nikon Z7, 600 mm, JPEG, FF | |||