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Nikon AF-S Nikkor 14-24mm f/2.8G ED (Nikon F, full size)
1503.– CHF

Nikon AF-S Nikkor 14-24mm f/2.8G ED

Nikon F, full size

Question about AF-S Nikkor 14-24mm f/2.8G ED - 26202

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I still have an older D90. Is the lens also recommendable there? or does it work at all?

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hmmmischi

8 years ago

Hi Thomas, since the 14 - 24 is one of the sharpest lenses, it will certainly give you great pleasure. The financial transition to FX format will be smaller if you take the crop factor into account when buying lenses and invest in large format lenses now. If you don't plan to do that and want to stay with the D90 for a long time, I recommend the Nikon 10-24mm, you will save a lot of money and have

the "better", i.e. more suitable lens for your D90.
MFG
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marcsteine4

8 years ago

Hi Thomas,
doesn't necessarily make sense from my point of view. The D90 is a DX camera, but the lens (with its 14-24) is designed for full-frame. In principle this is possible, but on your camera this lens becomes a 21 - 36mm lens.
This is no longer the ultimate wide-angle you are probably looking for - is it?

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rolandrick

7 years ago

Another thing: it's better to buy a cheap body and invest the money you save in better lenses. That's where the music plays.

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rolandrick

7 years ago

Thomas, you simply need a camera with an F bayonet and because there is no manual aperture ring, the camera must be able to adjust the aperture electronically. All focal lengths of DSLRs refer to KB - i.e. full frame, in Nikon terminology FX (DX is APS-C). This means that the 10-24 becomes a cropped 15-36 - because the APS-C sensor is smaller than the FX sensor. The FX/DX ratio is usually 1.5, you

ALWAYS have to multiply the focal length by 1.5 when using a DX or FX lens on a DX camera. But it is not the true focal length that changes, again it is only a "cropping".