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I bought my first Nikon F more than 35 years ago and have stayed with the marque ever since. Back then, so-called superwide angle lenses were either a dream or prohibitively expensive and a 24mm was a pretty "wild" optic. As time went on however, true rectilinear (read full-frame, non-fisheye) superwideangle lenses became more available and more affordable. Just before the digital explosion lens manufacturers had developed prime lenses and some zooms in the 14-21mm superwide range and photographers were routinely producing images that took full effect of their capabilities. The Nikon 20mm f2.8 AF (D or not D) is a typical example of that evoloutionary process. First introduced in 1989 it is the AF equivalent of an older manual focus design. Typical of many early generation AF lenses, the construction is mostly metal and reasonably robust (for AF). Also typical is the short throw required to focus the lens from infinity to it's closeset focus which results in almost instantaneous AF function on my D100 or F100. The addition of the D chip in the newest version is a usless upgrade and should not lead any of you to pay more for it. For the film shooter it is, in my opinion, a very good but not a great lens and, for many years, was a mainstay in my film travel outfit which was standardized on 62mm filters (20mmf2.8AF, 28-105mmf3.5-4.5AF zoom and 70-210mmf4.0AF zoom) It consistently delivered images that were sharp and contrasty with minimal corner light fall off wide open and reasonable levels of barrel distortion that could be mostly corrected in Photoshop. Enter digital and the small digital sensor. All of a sudden, the effective focal lengths of all my lenses have shifted 1.5x My superwide 20mm has now become a much less exciting 30mm and, while my 70-210mm zoom has become effectivly 105-315mm with an f4.0 max aperture, I'm limited at the wide end to the level of your average point-and-shoot. So where this lens fits in for the digital shooter I'm not sure I know anymore. Nikon's new 18-200mm digital zoom now cover's the whole range of view that my three lens travel kit used to cover on film and, at a current street price of arount $800, at about the same cost. I still have mine and the three lenses of my film travel outfit are still in the closet. Who knows.... someday.Read full review
The image shown is wrong, it's that of a 20mm f2.8 AIS manaul focus lens. The 20mm f2.8 AF Nikkor shares the same optics as the older AIS MF version. It's performance varies, depending upon what format you use it with. On a DX format camera it has the same coverage as a 30mm lens would on 35mm. It can be used with the camera's pop up flash making it a great lens for group photos around the holidays or at weddings. I used one for years for wedding photography. Since your using the "sweet spot" of this lens, it's very sharp. If your fortunate to own a FX format body or still shoot film, the lens comes to life as a ultra wide angle. This is the way the lens was intended to be used. It's too wide for most flash units to cover (must bounce), but great for interior shots and landscapes. It has enough DOF to include subjects in the fore ground and have them as well as infinity in focus at the same time. The lens is fairly well constructed and solid. There were some issues of the rear and internal elements coming loose in the AF version, so if possible, avoid this and buy the AF-D version (Nikon fixed problem). It's small and compact and a handly lens to own.Read full review
Great focal length for a wide variety of styles of shooting
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
This is one of the "must have" wide angle lens for Nikon DSL cameras. It takes in quite a bit of sharp space/landscapes without distortion at the picture edges.
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
Jacques Cousteau would be prod.
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
This is the same as the D lens, just without the fairly meaningless D feature. In fact, it is also has the same optics as the manual-focus 20mm f/2.8 lens, although the manual focus lens is better built mechanically and costs more. The 20mm AF was introduced in the spring of 1989. The internal, engraved metal focus distance indicator appears to be the same part as from the 20mm AI-s manual focus lens. Unfortunately, the outsides of this AF lens are plastic. The 62mm filter threads are plastic, just perfect for cross-threading.
Pros: Very lighter compared to other wide angle lenses. Very wide angle lens with much much less distortion. With a croped camera, you would find any distortion and soft images at the corners at all!!. Very sharp and fast!!! Cons: Little expensive. Made of plastice??? (but well made, very solid). Hood comes separately, but won't be need much. Overall, it is an excellent lens from the Nikon.
Nikon makes nearly 70 lens types. while there are some that are 'must buys' some are just waste of money. i own a nikon d200 SLR and have AF 18-135mm and 70-300mm nikkor lenses. recently i was trying to shoot an antique building located on a steep mountain but could not squeeze in the whole building in the frame. as there was no place for me to go further backwards on the mountain the only way i could have gotten a full picture of the building was if i was flying in a helicopter. at that time i realised how important a wide angle lens was for a photographer.
A tack sharp, fairly fast, wide angle lens. I bought mine new in about 1986, and would never part with it. Uses 72mm filters, which also work on my 300 4.5. 94 degree horizontal coverage is about as wide as you can get with fairly normal perspective in most cases. The dedicated lens shade is a good idea.
I really appreciate the quality of Nikon UW-Nikkor 20mm lens I ordered. It is Mint in Box as advertised. Thank you!
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned