Lenses and Optics

Just The Lenses: Canon vs Nikon Zooms at 70mm

Published September 2, 2014

It’s impossible to accurately compare lenses from different mounts using any form of Computerized Target Analysis testing (methods like DxO or Imatest). Target analysis tests an entire system (camera and lens). People try to, of course, but it’s not accurate since you always have the added variables of camera sensor, microlenses, in-camera image processing, etc. Some people try to use adapters to test different lenses on the same camera, but then you have added variables from the adapter and sometimes from sensor stack thickness.

In general, it doesn’t really matter. If you shoot Nikon you aren’t really interested in Canon lenses, and vice-versa. Still, directly comparing the lenses without any camera involved is interesting to some people, I think. Some people are thinking of changing brands – they know the other brand’s camera has higher resolution, but aren’t sure if the other brand’s lenses are as good. More people than ever are shooting lenses across brands using adapters, and they’re sometimes curious, too.

It is, of course, possible that nobody but me is interested in direct cross-brand lens comparisons. But since I am interested and since I have to test all of the lenses in our inventory anyway, I thought I’d show some of that data. If others find it interesting, too, I’ll write up some more comparisons like this.

I chose these specific lenses because I get asked every so often whether a 24-70 f/2.8 lenses at 70mm is sharper than the 70-200 f/2.8 lenses at 70mm. This again is a bit of a moot point, since there’s actually a focal length difference (the 24-70s are about 67mm when the lens says 70, while the 70-200 lenses are closer to 73mm).

But hey, I usually find the opportunity to do a meaningless test hard to resist.

Today’s Contestants

We tested 7 copies each of the Canon 24-70 f/2.8 Mk II, Canon 70-200 f/2.8 IS II, Nikon 24-70 f/2.8G AF-S, and Nikon 70-200 f/2.8G AF-S VR II lenses on our Trioptics Imagemaster optical bench. All copies had been through our routine optical and Imatest screening and passed with flying colors. These are all pretty modern designs (the Nikon 24-70 is the oldest, released in 2007) and I don’t think we’ll be seeing a replacement for any of them any time soon. All were tested at their 70mm settings according to the zoom ring, at f/2.8, and at infinity focus setting. (The actual focal lengths were about 67mm for both the 24-70 lenses, 73mm for both of the 70-200 lenses.)

MTF Charts

One thing about looking at MTF charts that people either lover or hate is that it gives a lot more data than just Imatest resolution numbers. It’s so easy to look at Imatest numbers and say, “A is 875 and B is 820, so A is better.” MTF charts give you a lot more information. That generally makes the summary a little more complex, which some people hate. But it also makes the summary a lot more useful.

If you don’t speak MTF, don’t worry. It’s not hard. Higher on the vertical axis is better. Dotted and solid lines of the same color close together are better (far apart is astigmatism). The horizontal axis goes from the center of the lens at “0” to the edge of the lens at “20”.

Legend for all the MTF graphs

 

Painting with a broad brush, the MTF graphs show that one thing that most people assumed is accurate. At 70mm, the Nikon 24-70 f/2.8 G isn’t quite as good as the other three lenses. The Nikon 24-70 is a good lens, but the other 3 are absolutely awesome lenses.

The MTF charts showed several things that I didn’t expect, though. First among those is that the Canon 70-200 f/2.8 IS II is actually a bit better at 70mm than the Canon 24-70 f/2.8 II. Imatest results on a large number of copies gave a slight edge to the 24-70.

There are a number of reasons for the difference. First, optical bench tests are done at infinity focusing distance, while the Imatest results were at about 15 feet. Second, Imatest shows only the MTF50 — a snapshot along the 0.5 line on the vertical axis of the MTF chart. Finally, Imatest results show a lot of averaging that the MTF graphs don’t do. I usually lump the readings for center, average of the entire lens, and average of the corners, for example. Additionally, Imatest doesn’t separate out astigmatism (the difference between sagittal and tangential lines). On the other hand, Imatest can look a bit further out into the corner than on the optical bench does.

Going into this test I expected the Nikon 70-200 f/2.8 VR II was as good in the center as the Canon lenses, which it is. I thought it would be a bit weaker off center, but it’s not that simple. If you look at just the sagittal numbers (solid lines) the Nikon has a steady fall-off, while the Canon gets softer, then sharper. So in the area from about halfway to 2/3 of the way to the edge of the image the Nikon is better, while the Canon gets better out on the edges. The Nikon also has less astigmatism.

Field Curvature

We also ran field curvature tests on all the lenses. If you haven’t seen these graphs before, they’re a bit different than the MTF curves. (You can read more about them here.) Most people think of field curvature in kind of general terms, but tend to forget that the tangential and sagittal fields can have very different curvature and that the curves can be complex or simple. A perfectly flat field is actually rather rare.

The field curvature graphs give us a lot of information about the lens that we can’t really get any other way. Basically these show what the area of sharpest focus across the lens looks like, assuming you had carefully focused on the center point.

Notice the Nikon 24-70 has some significant field curvature. It’s going to be very difficult to get the center and corners both in sharpest focus without stopping down quite a bit. The Canon 70-200 has a more complex ‘sombrero’ type sagittal curvature with a simpler tangential curvature. The Canon 24-70 Mk II and Nikon 70-200 VR II both have impressively flat fields of focus.

The sagittal field curvature on the Canon 70-200 f/2.8 IS II explains a bit about its MTF chart. If you look at the sagittal field curvature graph notice how the area of sharpest focus has curved away from the “0” line between 10mm and 15mm from the center, then curves back so it’s in sharp focus again at 18mm. Now go back and look at the sagittal MTF curves for the lens and you get some idea as to why it gets softer, then sharper, then softer again.

You might have noticed a bit of tilt in a couple of the field curvature examples. These are minor and would be impossible to detect in optical testing. Just to reassure you, below are the tangential and sagittal graphs for a Nikon 24-70 f/2.8 that was tilted enough to be obvious in an image (it is not one included in the testing).

Field curvature graphs for a decentered and tilted lens.

The Best Lens?

Life was nice and simple when we averaged some Imatest numbers and easily declared a lens ‘better’ or ‘sharper’ than another. We can still do that, of course. When there’s a big difference between lenses it’s just as apparent on the MTF bench as it was with Imatest. When we compare a couple of good lenses, though, the information is not so much ‘better and worse lens’, but rather  ‘stronger and weaker points’ of each lens.

These lenses provide a good example. When I just provided MTF numbers, I found the Canon 24-70 f/2.8 a bit better than the Canon 70-200 f/2.8 IS II at 70mm. Very close, but a bit better. Comparing them here my original thought was things might be different at infinity focus compared to the closer focus used for Imatest. But the additional information we get with bench testing shows us more than just better or worse. The 70-200 is a bit sharper in the center while the 24-70 has a much flatter field.

If you look at the MTF chart there’s not much question the Canon 24-70 has a higher MTF than the Nikon 24-70 in most locations and at most frequencies. However, the Nikon has less astigmatism in the outer areas, and that may give it a ‘look’ that some prefer over the absolute resolution of the Canon.

Before doing this test, if you had asked me I would have told you I thought the Canon 70-200 was just a bit sharper than the Nikon. It might be, by just a tiny bit in the center. Away from center, though, the Nikon 70-200 is better at higher frequencies. The Nikon 70-200 also has less astigmatism in the outer edges and a flatter field than the Canon.

The field curvature in the edges of the 70-200 f/2.8 IS II at 70mm would make some people (including me) prefer the very flat field of the Canon 24-70 f/2.8 Mk II, at least at 70mm. It depends what you use the lens for. For portraiture or action sports, it would be completely meaningless but I do some architectural shooting at 70mm.

Saying one of these three lenses is clearly better than the other at 70mm is rather silly. They have some different characteristics; some slightly different strengths and weaknesses. The reality is if I shot Nikon and carried these two zooms, I’d use the 70-200 for work around 70mm. If I shot Canon and carried these two, I’d prefer the flat field of the 24-70 once in a while, need the IS of the 70-200 once in a while, but generally wouldn’t worry about changing lenses to get a 70mm shot.

Still, I find the comparisons interesting, even if not very useful, and we’ll be doing some more.  And who knows — someday when I’m shooting my interchangeable mount 50mpix SLR I might actually be making a decision as to whether I want the Zeiss, Canon, or Nikon lens for it in a given focal length.

Roger Cicala and Aaron Closz

Lensrentals.com

September 2014

 

Author: Roger Cicala

I’m Roger and I am the founder of Lensrentals.com. Hailed as one of the optic nerds here, I enjoy shooting collimated light through 30X microscope objectives in my spare time. When I do take real pictures I like using something different: a Medium format, or Pentax K1, or a Sony RX1R.

Posted in Lenses and Optics
  • Borgefjell

    One question about the offical mtf-chart of the Canon 70-200/2.8. According to the mtf-chart the lenses m30 and s30-curves at f/8 are showing some bad drop which would be a hint that the lens has quite “bad” resolution at this settings and might suffer from astigmatism. Some help to understand this would be very welcome! Awesome blog by the way, very interesting reading!

  • Lee Saxon

    The 24-70 vs 70-200 question was a cool one to address.

  • Brian

    For the age-old prime vs. zoom comparison, I’d like to see a comparison at 85mm for these big 70-200 f/2.8 zooms, and the f/4 zooms, and the f/1.4 and f/1.8 primes, and then there’s all the third party versions of those lenses…and now we’re talking about dozens of lens models, so I don’t imagine you have the time.

  • Roger Cicala

    Aaron, shoot me an email at Roger at Lensrentals.com We’re doing things in-house in Excel right now and it would be worth considering options.

  • Roger Cicala

    Thanks Christian. I apologize for my FE centric outlook. I am planning on comparing the f/4 lenses and those were on my list. The alpha lens comparison would be very simple to add and I should do that.

  • Aaron

    @Roger:
    Who said you really had to get to it? Probably would take an hour or two on the phone to get the idea of what you’d need and want out of the database as well as a description of how the file(s) are produced for each lens. After that, just a number of sample files for a few different lenses and then review the Requirements & Specs to make sure it’s what you want. After that…all in my hands. And what fun it’d be! 🙂

  • Christian Koren

    I guessed that you maybe were referring to E-mount. But to me, that doesn’t make much sense either. How do you know that Todd Godwin and Mike are not asking about A-mount lenses? The flange focal distance of E-mount is very different from EF and F-mount. This has implications on the optics. And there is no FE 24-70 f2.8 and no FE 70-200 f2.8. So E-mount just doesn’t fit well within the scope of this cross-brand lens comparison. The proper counterpart to F and EF-mount is A-mount.

    (Strictly speaking there is no such thing as FE-mount. There are FE-lenses – but not that many.)

    BTW, I really enjoy all your posts. I keep on checking LensRental.com every other day for the next one to appear 🙂

  • Roger Cicala

    Christian, I was referring to the FE mount lenses, not A mount.

  • Roger Cicala

    Aaron, I’d love some help if I can ever get to it.

  • Christian Koren

    “The Sony ‘all electric focus’ lenses don’t remain at the focus point when the camera is turned off. If you set them upright on an optical bench and there’s no power to the motor, they focusing group falls back to close focus position.”
    This is just plain wrong! Please let somebody who knows the basics of A-mount tell you how to operate a Sony A-mount camera with an SSM-lens.

  • Aaron

    Ha, Olaf Optical. Love it 🙂

    BTW, sure you don’t need any help with the database/load process? I’d love to help out, it’d be a ton of fun and I’d do it just to do it.

  • Pretty surprised regards to a Canon’s 70-200.
    Great job Roger !
    …as usual 😉

  • Roger Cicala

    Mike,
    The Sony ‘all electric focus’ lenses don’t remain at the focus point when the camera is turned off. If you set them upright on an optical bench and there’s no power to the motor, they focusing group falls back to close focus position. Others tend to remain where you left them focused.

  • Roger, here’s another request to add the Tamron’s into the mix.

  • Mike

    Roger, I don’t understand your comment on the Sony lens…why is it different than the others with electronics and infinity focus?

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