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Reviewed by
albot976
, Intermediate
Price Paid
$0.00
Photography Experience
2-5 years
Summary
When I bought into Olympus, I had decent amount of SLR experience. After spending some time with the kit lens, I was looking to upgrade and heard great things about the 12-60 and so decided to give it a try.
Physically, it is a big lens, but the performance is big too. It handles very well on my 510, no complaints there. It weighs a decent amount too, but nothing abnormal. Filter size is 72mm, so filters will be slightly more expensive. The lens does not rotate while focusing, easing the use of polarizing filters (which will likely be used on a lens of this zoom range).
It excels in almost every way that a lens can be measured. In the middle of its zoom range, image quality is absolutely outstanding and chromatic abberations are practically nonexistent. Towards the zoom extremes, there is (according to reviews I have read) slight performance drop in both departments, but in my experience it is practically unnoticeable.
I've never had a problem with lens flare. The lens has produced good (but I wouldn't say excellent) bokeh in my shots. It is also surprisingly capable in the macro department - having a minimum focusing distance less than 1 foot away from the whole 12 to 60.
It snaps to focus quickly and silently, and the focus ring is NOT focus by wire, but mechanical. I prefer this since I find that the tactile feedback it offers makes it easier to focus more accurately in those few situations that AF doesn't cut it.
Aperture range of 2.8-4 is nice, but not amazing. Ideally, I would want this to be a little bit faster on the telephoto end to give me a little more wiggle room.
My only real complaint is that distortion on the extreme wide end (12-13mm) is a little troublesome. It is not significant but it is abnormally shaped, like a trough/wave, and so correction in PP is difficult. I've only had this be a problem In applications where I needed horizontal/vertical distortion to be nonexistent, such as a straight on architectural photo of distinct lines on a building. In general landscape and architecture though, it is so minimal (and easily avoided by stepping up to even 14 or 15mm) that it wasn't noticeable or a problem. This is the only reason I momentarily hesitated to give it a full 5/5 rating.
Out of the box, the zoom ring was a bit stiff, and hit a "speed bump" at around 35mm or so. However, it smoothed out after a couple hours of use (all on one day), and has handled deliberately and accurately ever since.
Durable and dust/splash proof, it has already survived a couple hundred miles of weeklong backpacking trips through forests and mountains during spring, summer, and fall. Absolutely no problems even after some decent wear and tear.
If you're going to spend money on a lens, this is the one. It's a fantastic workhorse lens and takes care of my everyday and some not-so-everyday applications with ease. Highly recommended.
Strengths
Excellent corner to corner image quality
Versatile; wide zoom range, 12-60 (24-120 35mm equivalent)
Dust/splash proof
Weaknesses
Slight, but odd, distortion at extreme wide end
Similar Products Used
Zuikos 14-45 f3.5-5.6, 14-54 f2.8-3.5
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