Monday 10 August 2015

Any reason to buy stock lens for Sony Alpha if I already have good Minolta Maxxum lenses?


I am a novice photographer looking to get into DSLR photography. I have an old Maxxum 5 and a couple lenses for it: a 75-300 zoom and a 28-80 zoom. After reading this question, it is clear that these lenses will work with a Sony a57 (let me know if I'm confused on that point). My question is, is there any reason to buy the a57 with a new lens, or are my existing lenses just fine? It looks like I can purchase the Sony with an 18-55 lens for about $100 more than just the body. Other than the shorter focal length, which I don't care much about at the moment, will this lens perform better than the 28-80 I already have? It looks like the lens will cost me about $200 separately so if it is worth getting I am better off buying it with the body. But if it isn't better than my current lenses I'd rather save the $100.



Answer



Summary:




  • The 18-55mm kit lens is better than many kit lenses and is worth buying.
    (This is based on an extensive body of information available for both lenses. See below)





  • While many old Minolta Full Frame lenses are very good optically, and better than typical entry level A-mount Sony lenses, in this case the 18-55mm kit lens is noticeably superior optically to the 28-80 Minolta lens (unless you have the Xi version, which is possible but unlikely. Even the Xi version is not marvellous on sharpness).




  • The range from 18-28mm which is lacking with your existing lenses will be useful in many "walk-around" situations and not having it makes the lens less useful overall. The extra top down range (55-80mm) is useful but will be less missed than the extra bottom end range.




  • A superb resouce for Sony & Minolta A-mount lenses suitable for your camera is available at Dyxum's lens page - which provides details and invaluable consistently scored user reviews of A-mount lenses both ancient and modern,





The A57 - which got a DP Review Gold rating is a superb photo making system (as opposed to just being a camera) and you will be astounded at what it can achieve once you get used to it. The seamlessly integrated live view made possible by the Pellicle mirror, what-you-see-is-what-you-get EVF and constant phase type focusing transforms the overall taking experience compared to that from a "normal" DSLR. Note that more than for some cameras, the A57's RAW output is far better than JPEG*.


Overall, you will not regret buying the 18-55 lens in the circumstances.
The biggest thing you will miss on the lenses you have is the 18-28 range of the DX lens. I've occasionally used a 28-xxxmm lens on an APSC Minolta & Sony body camera and for day to day use would definitely miss the 18-28 = 28-42mm equivalent segment.


The Sony 18-55 kit lens is better than may be expected with 78 user reviews giving it a 3.99/5 average rating. In this case it is superior to 3 of the 4 Minolta lenses in the 28-80 range so is worth having. Sharpness is good for an entry level lens, with "build" being what you'd expect in a modern plastic entry level lens.


While it is a matter of personal preference, when I am doing casual candid 'street photography, for general scenes I most usually use 18mm focal length on an APSC camera. The change from 18mm to 28mm gives you 18/28 = 64% of the width and angle of view and only 40% of the area. The difference is very substantial. 18mm on an APSC (equivalent to 27mm on a 35mm full frame) is on the upper end of what is classically accepted as "wide angle". 28mm APSC = 42mm FF is definitely not.




The following applies more genrally. In many cases my advice would be that the old Minolta lenses are good value for money and superior to kit alternatives. This casse is a welcome exception.


Quality wise the older Full Frame Minolta lenses are liable to be of equal to better quality than entry level "kit" Sony DX lenses.


You can find user reviews and discussion for all things Minolta, including much information re lenses at www.dyxum.com (aka Dynax + Maxum). DYXUM homme page here



Lens page here - accessed by tastefully small and easily overlooked top right menu entry on home page.


Use selector guide at right to narrow range.
You will see a rating out of 5 per lens based on user reviews.
Anything over 4 overall is usally well worth having - but each review has 5 components (sharpness, color, build, distortion, flare control) and you may well care about some more than others. (eg build is of low import when assessing absolute prformance - but important if the lens is to see much use and long life).


There are 4 x 28-80mm lenses listed, with ratings of 3.44, 3.5, 4.22, 3.62
The 3.5 is a plastic looking kit lens and may well be what you have. For it and the 3.62 lens all ratings are under 4 and while they would be "OK" they are not what you'd want to use long term. The next 2 by score are not vastly better and the 4.22 is worth keeping forever. Minolta AF 28-80 xi F4-5.6 2618-110 although better lenses exist that cover this range.


On the review page note where it says "total: 22 reviews". The "reviews" is a live link - click it and you get to read the 22 reviews.





  • JPEG/RAW - While it is generally the case that RAW produces superior results to JPEG "out of camera" it is especially true for the A57. The A57 has a wider "gap" between JPEG & RAW than some others and if you want to get the most detail from its reasonably good 16 Mp sensor then RAW helps you do so.





Do I "need" an 18mm lens when I have a 28mm one?


An 18mm lens on an APSC camera with a 1.5 crop factor is the equivalent of a full frame 35mm camera with a 1.5 x 18 = 27mm lens. A 28mm lens on an APSC camera is the equivalenbt of a 42mm FF lens. The difference is extremely significant.


The 4 photos below were taken "while wandering around" using an APSC camera with 18mm fical length setting. The rectangles marked on each show the area would be covered if a 28mm lens had been used from the sam position. While "foot zoom" will allow you to obtain approximately the same result with a 28mm lens, circumstances and sheer physical constraints often make this completely impractical. Also, a 28mm lens shot covering the same area will change the perspective - for better or worse.


The top left shot has the camera held at arms length. MUCH longer arms would be needed to use a 28mm lens in this manner.
Top right and bottom left street scenes were probably unobtainable in the circumstances with a 28mm lens.
For the brick tunnel shot I could have moved back. But perspective would have changed - in this case that would just be "different" - neither good nor bad. I also walked back from here and took photos with more of the brickwork showing using the 18mm setting.


--> A number of photos all taken at 18mm can be found here.


Some have the 28mm effective area marked - in others it can be readily envisaged. Most of these are street scenes where a 28mm shot would have been limiting or impossible.

The bride photo was taken from the tallest chair I could find. A 28mm lens could not have achieved it in the circumstances. [It was the end of a long day. She was very tired. She did not really want to have this photo taken and could not see why I wanted to take it. She absolutely adores it :-). ].[More flash diffusion need].




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