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Olympus M.Zuiko Digital 60 mm f/2.8 ED Macro
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Specifications:
Manufacturer | Olympus |
---|---|
Model | M.Zuiko Digital 60 mm f/2.8 ED Macro |
Lens style | Telephoto |
Focal length | 60 mm |
Maximum aperture | f/2.8 |
Angle of view | 20 o |
Closest focusing distance | 0.19 m |
Maximum magnification | 1:1 |
Minimum aperture | 22 |
Number of diaphragm blades | 7 |
Auto focus type | AF MSC |
Lens Construction | 13 elements / 10 groups |
Filter diameter | 46 mm |
Macro | Yes |
Available mounts | Micro Four Thirds |
Dimensions | 82 x 56 mm |
Weight | 186 g |
Additional information |
Owners reviews (6)
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Overall
Owner since: 6 months
Price: 300
User profile: Amateur
Cons: - Autofocus hunts - Aperture blades never really rounded - Feels a bit cheap (but it\'s not fragile) - No hood included
Pros: - Very light and small for a 120mm equivalent lens - Weather sealed - Very good sharpness at all apertures
Summary: This lens is incredibly light and small for it\'s focal lenght. Compared to this little thing, all other macro lenses are huge and heavy. Build quality is good, the lens is weather sealed but feels quite plasticky. Otherwise it was a mixed bag for me. Nothing to say about sharpness, it\'s simply great from wide open. From my opinion bokeh could have been better. Aperture blades were not properly aligned on the 2 samples I tried, resulting distracting bokeh balls when shooting against sun... Might sound as a detail but bokeh is an important purpose for a macro lens. Autofocus seemed overall quick but sometimes hunted at close distance and was not very reliable. I finally sold the lens because I thought it was overpriced.
Overall
Owner since: 1 year
Price: 400
User profile: Amateur
Cons: the package comes without a lens hood
Pros: very good optical quality with well corrected LoCA (longitudinal chromatic aberration), relatively small, good match for medium size m43 cameras
Summary: A great lens for reasonable price.
Overall
Owner since: 1 year
Price: €519
User profile: Amateur
Cons: Lenshood not included. It's a plastic lens.
Pros: Although it's plastic lens it is well build. It's a small lens, very light and it has a focus limiter. You can make picture on a 1:1 scale. The lens is dust and splash water proof. It is very sharp, and has a nice bokeh.
Summary: Great 60mm micro4/3 macro lens, for a reasanable prize. It' light and well build although it's a plastic lens. A must have for macro photographers on a micro 4/3 camera. I use it on a Olympus OMD EM1.
Overall
Owner since: 1 month
Price: 350 euros
User profile: Amateur
Cons: Plastic body (but very nice and not heavy), we have to buya separate lenshood
Pros: Image quality, focus limiter, focus speed, beautiful and small lens
Summary: I strongly recomend it. Check my photos at www.flickr.com/photos/manuelchagas
Overall
Owner since: 3 months
Price:
User profile: Semipro
Cons: You have to buy the lens hood separately
Pros: Silent and fast AF, no longitudinal aberrations, good lens hood (but you have to buy it separately), focus limiter, small and light, water proof,
Summary: The best macro lens for mFT (FT) in my opinion.
Overall
Owner since: 1 month
Price:
User profile: Amateur
Cons: none to speak of
Pros: excellent across the board
Summary: I find it odd that the lenstip review of this lens says "it has no competition in the micro 4/3 system, especially given the fact that lenstip reviewed the Panasonic Leica 45mm macro, which has been out for awhile, with equal praise for its sharpness and other qualities. The advantage of the Oly 60mm for macro is that it is a bit longer (60mm compared to 45mm) and it has better focus delimiters. The advantage of the PLeica 45mm is that it is shorter, which might be an advantage for indoor, general purpose shooting. They are both great lenses, but this Olympus 60mm certainly has stiff competition in the Leica 45mm. The latter, however, is more costly.