Summary

Highly Recommended awardThe Nikon 24-85/3.5-4.5G VR is a surprisingly good lens at a reasonable price. The performance is pretty good in the DX image-circle but you need to stop down to f5.6 or even f8 to get good performance in the corners of a full-frame 36MP D800. Overall it is a worthy compact kit-zoom for those who start into FX-land or want to keep their options open for a future upgrade to an FX-body. A Recommended rating is well earned.

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Nikon 24-85mm VR review
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Intro

The Nikkor AF-S 24-85mm f/3.5-4.5G VR is an affordable general-purpose zoom that’s compatible with full-frame Nikon FX bodies. Announced in June 2012, it’s arguably the successor to the Nikon AF 24-85mm f/2.8-4D from 2000. It’s optically a little slower but now sports Vibration Reduction to counteract camera shake and as an AF-S model it’ll autofocus on any Nikon body.

An affordable general-purpose zoom for expensive full-frame bodies may seem like an odd combination, but the AF-S 24-85mm provides a useful range without breaking the bank and could complement an existing selection of primes. You could equally mount it on a DX body now and enjoy 36-128mm equivalent coverage with an upgrade to full-frame penciled-in for the future. It also intriguingly suggests a more affordable full-frame body may be in the pipeline, with this presumably being the natural kit lens.

With the addition of the AF-S 24-85mm f/3.5-4.5G VR, Nikon now offers three stabilized FX general-purpose zooms starting at a decent wide angle and zooming in to various degrees of tele-coverage: the 24-85mm, 24-120mm and 28-300mm. The big question though is whether this new “kit-zoom” performs adequately on the 36MP FX-sensor of a D800 or is it a combination that can’t be recommended? So in this review I’ll have a look at Nikon’s newest FX zoom, and find out whether the lens can deliver the goods on Nikon’s highest resolution DSLR.

 

Nikkor-AF-S-24-85mm-f3.5-4.5G-VR

 

Facts from the catalog

As usual I’ll have a look at the technical data first. I’ve rated the features with a [+] (or [++]), when it’s better than average or even state of the art, a [0] if it’s standard or just average, and [-] if there’s a disadvantage.

Size (diam. x length): 78 x 82 mm (3.1 x 3.2 in.). A pretty compact package – practically the same size as the Nikon AF 24-85mm f/2.8-4D. [0]

Weight: 465 g (16.4 oz) = 80g lighter than the Nikon AF 24-85mm f/2.8-4D. But that older model offers a larger aperture. [0]

Optics: 16 elements in 11 groups. The older sibling has one less optical element. Flares and ghosts can result from too many air/glass-surfaces and I’ll have a closer look at performance in this regard – especially in the absence of Nano-coating. The cross-section shows three aspherical and one ED-glass elements. [0]

Closest focus distance/max. magnification: 0.38 m (1.25 ft.) / 1:4.5. In reality I was able to go down to 1:3.8. This is close to what I often need in nature (1:3-1:5). [+]

Filter-thread: 72mm = a cheaper standard than with the larger pro-lenses [+]

IS: Yes = helps a lot [+]

AF: AF-S with SWM (silent wave motor), so does work on D60/3×00/5×00-bodies, and there’s manual-focus override by turning the focus ring [+]

Covers full frame/FX or smaller = very good [+]

Price: around 500 EUR new (incl. 19% VAT) = reasonable. The old Nikon AF 24-85mm f/2.8-4D is around 660 EUR now. [+]

Comes with a flexible lens pouch, lens-shade is included and reversible for transport, and the lens-caps are standard Nikon’s. [0]

Distance information is relayed to the camera, so the Nikon body can do all the advanced exposure-related stuff with this lens. But this is true for most alternatives too. [+]

Aperture ring = no, just like all Nikon G-lenses. [0]

Sealing: yes! A rubber grommet at the lens-mount. [+]

So the score in the “features-department” is 0[-]/5[0]/8[+]. This lens ticks almost all important boxes with the only annoyance being the slightly brighter aperture of its predecessor. But to put it in perspective, f2.8 on the old 24-85mm is only two thirds of a stop brighter than f3.5 on the new model when both are zoomed-out to 24mm, while f4 on the old one is only one third brighter than f4.5 on the new one when both are set to 85mm.

Motivation

:

A reasonably priced 24-85mm zoom may be your first lens on an FX-body and you want it to cover many standard situations. And it does: at 24mm shortest focal length it lets you capture a crowd in tighter spaces or shoot architecture. And with 85mm on the long end you’re right up into the realm of light tele-lens capable of offering a good perspective and working distance for portraits and street-photography. Although not equipped with a large aperture like 24-70/2.8 zooms it offers image stabilization to compensate for 2-4 stops over a non-stabilized alternative. That should make the lens usable even under dim lighting conditions. Be aware though that image-stabilization allows you to shoot longer exposures that are a no-no with fast-moving subjects like children or when shooting sports. In the latter shooting situations you should crank-up the ISO to get faster shutter-times.

Alternatives

:

– The old Nikon AF 24-85mm f/2.8-4D: That lens does not have VR, nor does it auto-focus on drive-less bodies like the D3x00 or D5x00. It is more expensive too but offers up to 2/3 of a stop larger aperture on the wide end plus a macro-mode that let’s you get down to 1:2 magnification.
– Then there are the 24-70/2.8 zooms from Nikon, Sigma and Tamron (the latter even offering image stabilization) but prices are much higher, starting at 750 EUR and going up to 1500 EUR.
– The only cheaper alternative is the SP AF 28-75mm 2.8 XR Di LD Asp IF Macro from Tamron for around 350 EUR. It offers a constant larger aperture but covers a smaller band of focal lengths with its 2.7x zoom (compared to the 3.5x range of the Nikon zoom) plus it’s not stabilized and has no AF-motor built-in.

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