18-270mm F/3.5-6.3 Di II VC PZD Model B008



Specifications

Specifications
Model B008 Length 88mm (i) (ii) (3.5 in)
Focal Length 18-270mm Entire Length 96.4mm (i) (ii) (3.8 in)
Maximum Aperture F/3.5-6.3 Diameter Φ74.4mm (2.9 in)
Angle of View (diagonal) 75° 33’ - 5° 55’ Weight 450g(i) (15.9 oz)
Lens Construction 16 elements in 13 groups Diaphragm Blade Number 7
Minimum Focus Distance 0.49m (19.3in) Minimum Aperture F/22-40
Max. Magnification Ratio 1 : 3.8 (at f=270mm : MFD 0.49m) Standard Accessorise Flower shaped lens hood
Filter Size Φ62mm Compatible Mounts Canon, Nikon, Sony(iii)
  1. Length, entire length, and weight values given are for the Nikon mount. Specifications, appearance, functionality, etc., may be changed without prior notice.
  2. Length is the distance between the mount face and the tip of the lens. Entire length is the distance between the tip of the lens and the tip of the protrusion.
  3. The Sony mount does not include the VC image stabilization functionality, as the body of Sony digital SLR cameras includes image stabilization functionality.

MTF

How to Read MTF Charts

MTF (Modulation Transfer Function) curves describe to what extent the tested lens can faithfully reproduce contrast of the subject in images it captures.

The closer the 10 lp/mm (line pairs per millimeter) curve (the thick line for low frequency) in an MTF chart to "1" of the vertical axis (the higher up), the higher the contrast reproduction performance of the tested lens will be. The closer the 30 lp/mm curve (the thin line for high frequency) to "1" (the higher up), the higher the resolving power and thus the subjective sharpness of the lens will be.

Lens performance differs depending upon directions. Solid lines show performance in the sagittal (radial) direction while dotted lines indicate performance in the meridional (circumferential) direction.

When sharp lenses capable of delivering uniform optical performance over the entire image field are tested, MTF charts show curves plotted in good balance.

Performance characteristics of photographic lenses cannot be expressed with only MTF charts. There are other factors that are expressed in different methods, such as taste of softness and degrees of compensation of various aberrations. But you can use MTF charts as a scale to measure lens performance.

MTF (Modulation Transfer Function) Charts


 

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