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Canon
EF 50mm f/1.4
USM AF |
Nikon
50mm f/1.4D AF |
Pentax
SMCP-FA 50mm
f/1.4 AF |
Sigma
50mm f/1.4
EX DG
HSM
AF |
Sony
50mm
f/1.4 AF |
|
| Tested Focal Length and Maximum Aperture |
|
51.68mm f/1.46 |
|
51.68mm f/1.46 |
|
51.93mm f/1.45 |
|
48.00mm f/1.48 |
|
51.58mm f/1.46 |
|
| Mounts |
|
Canon AF |
|
Nikon AF, Fujifilm AF |
|
Pentax AF, Samsung AF |
|
Canon AF, Nikon AF, Pentax
AF, Sigma AF, Sony AF |
|
Sony AF, Minolta AF |
|
| Weight |
|
0.62 lb |
|
0.51 lb |
|
0.50 lb |
|
1.16 lb |
|
0.49 lb |
|
| Length |
|
1.96 in. |
|
1.65 in. |
|
1.44 in. |
|
2.68 in. |
|
1.67 in. |
|
| Filter Size |
|
58mm |
|
52mm |
|
49mm |
|
77mm |
|
55mm |
| |
| Certified Test Results |
| SQF Rating |
|
APS: Excellent
Full-frame: Excellent |
|
APS: Excellent
Full-frame: Excellent |
|
APS: Excellent
Full-frame: Excellent |
|
APS: Excellent
Full-frame: Excellent |
|
APS: Excellent
Full-frame: Excellent |
|
| Distortion |
|
APS: Imperceptible
barrel (0.10%) Full-frame:
Slight barrel (0.24%) |
|
APS: Imperceptible
barrel (0.10%) Full-frame:
Slight barrel (0.22%) |
|
APS: Imperceptible
barrel (0.08%)
Full-frame: n.a.* |
|
APS: Imperceptible
barrel (0.10%) Full-frame:
Slight barrel (0.21%) |
|
APS: Imperceptible
barrel (0.10%) Full-frame:
Slight barrel (0.26%) |
|
| Light Falloff Gone By... |
|
APS: f/1.6
Full-frame: f/2.8 |
|
APS: f/1.6
Full-frame: f/2.8 |
|
APS: f/2.0
Full-frame: n.a.* |
|
APS: f/1.6
Full-frame: f/2.8 |
|
APS: f/1.7
Full-frame: f/2.8 |
|
| Magnification Ratio |
|
1:6.52 |
|
1:6.20 |
|
1:6.00 |
|
1:6.29 |
|
1:6.16 |
|
| Close-Focusing Distance |
|
17.75 in. |
|
17.12 in. |
|
16.75 in. |
|
16.25 in. |
|
17.12 in. |
|
| Comments |
|
Canon's only lens with a
micro USM AF motor that
also allows full-time MF. |
|
First sold in 1990, it'll soon
be replaced by a G-type
50mm to street for $440. |
|
From the film era, our leastexpensive
lens boasts the
best distortion control. |
|
The most costly here, it's
physically the largest and,
by a hair, the sharpest. |
|
The lightest 50mm f/1.4, it's
very similar to the film-era
Minolta Maxxum 50mm. |
|
| Street Price |
|
$320 |
|
$300 |
|
$200 |
|
$500 |
|
$350 |
|
| * Results not available because there is no full-frame DSLR for this lens |
While there's a whole nation of
current and discontinued full-frame 50mm
f/1.4s out there, lens makers are only just
beginning to produce high-speed normal
primes for DSL Rs that have smaller sensors.
So far, there are just two: the Sigma 30mm
f/1.4 EX DC HSM AF and Panasonic Leica D
Summilux 25mm f/1.4 AF .
Sigma's lens scales up to 45-48mm on
APS-sized sensors; the Panasonic to 50mm
on Four Thirds DSL Rs. Together, they're the
fastest digital-only lenses available today,
and their designs are much newer than those
of most high-speed normals. As a result, they
deliver higher contrast and sharpness than
their film-era counterparts, and, depending
on the camera body, faster AF speeds, too. |
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SIGMA: Available in most popular lensmounts (including Four
Thirds), the Sigma 30mm (released in the winter of 2004-05 and
streeting for $433) was the first Sigma non-tele prime to benefit
from the sharpening power of SL D (Special Low Dispersion)
glass. Like Sigma's full-frame 50mm f/1.4, it's large for the class.
That's because of its HSM focusing motor and larger glass
elements, which deliver less softening and vignetting along the
edges when used at maximum aperture. |
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PANASONIC: Among the most expensive of all high-speed
normals (digital or full-frame), the Panasonic-made, Leica designed
25mm f/1.4 ($800, street) is as sharp and contrasty as
the competition, but its distortion control -- as you would expect
from Leica -- is top-drawer. The Panasonic produced barrel
distortion in the Imperceptible range (0.09%), in contrast to the
Sigma's Visible range (0.78%). That makes the Panasonic one of
the best of all high-speed normal lenses, digital or full-frame. |