Some people are shocked at the size of these Z lenses. It is the bursting of the bubble of expectations that mirrorless would provide nice compact, light-weight lenses. To come back to reality, you only have to see Sony's range of massively chunky and heavy prime FF lenses.
I grew up with nice compact Nikon AI-S lenses, 28/2.8, 35/2.0, 50/1.4, 105/2.5 full frame lenses, and most of Sony's prime lenses - at those apertures - are larger, chunkier and heavier.
When you see how compact those Nikon AI-S manual lenses were, you have to find out why even Zeiss manual primes for Sony E-mount are so gigantic.
It's seems it's because mirrorless FF tends to produce very large lenses. What you lose on lens mount distance, all that distance gets added to the lens (in simplistic terms). So the FF mirrorless lenses tend to be larger than the equivalent F mount.
I don't know why we are at it. That is like those endless troll stating that "f/2 is f/2 is f/2" to try to oppose the equivalence discussion.
So here, I will make the comparison with Canon lenses because I had 15 years of experience and ownership on those.
Sony FE lenses ARE either
lighter / smaller (with Sony body, you save 26mm on the total length for same lens length compared to a Canon body) than DSLR counterpart:
- 24-70 f/4 IS: 426g and 94.5mm (FE Sony) instead of 600g and 93mm (EF Canon) so 24,5mm shorter in total
- 16-35 f/4 IS: 518g and 98.5mm instead of 615g and 112.8mm
- 11/12-24 f/4 IS: 565g and 117mm instead of 1.18kg and 132mm
- 90-105mm macro f/2,8 IS: 602g and 130mm instead of 625g and 123mm
- 24-105 f/4 IS: 663g and 113mmm instead 795g and 118mm
- 100-400 f/4,5-5,6 IS: 1.4kg and 205mm instead of 1.64kg and 193mm
- 24-70 f/2,8: 886g and 136mm instead of 805g and 113mm
- 16-35 f/2,8: 680g and 122mm instead of 790g and 127mm
- 70-200 f/2,8 IS: 1,48kg and 200mm instead of 1.48kg and 199mm35mm f/1,4: 630g and 112mm instead of 760g and 106mm
- 85mm f/1,8: 371g and 82mm instead of 425g and 72mm : and the Sony FE is much better than the Canon in term of quality. It is better at f/1,8 onward than the 85L
- 85mm f/1,4: 820g and 107mm instead of 950g and 105mm
- 28mm: f/2, 200g and 60mm instead of f/2,8, 260g and 51mm
or
so much better than they do not compare:
- 55mm f/1,8: 281g and 70mm. This is the same kind of comments we have today with Nikon Z version. So it is lighter than the Canon 50mm f/1,4 but 20mm longer so all in all, it ends up being as long on the body. But the Zeiss 55mm trounces the Canon big time.
If you want in the same league, Sony offers the Sony 50mm f/1,8 for 200$ and 100g less than the Canon and smaller package.
- 50mm f/1,4: 778g and 108mm instead of 290g and 50mm : yes, the Canon is much lighter and smaller, but the Sony destroys the Canon. It is not even in the same league. It is much better than the 50L indeed.
So it IS true that mirrorless is
bringing much weight saving and a smaller package.
Here, without being exhaustive, this is a saving from a few g...to 100-200g (24-105, 16-35, 24-70, 85 1,4....) …to more than half a kilo (12-24).
This together with the body, it means that everytime you shoot, you are carrying 400g to more than half a kilo less than with the DSLR.
And if you have several lenses, your bag can be 1-2kg lighter.
If it is not a major advantage, I don't know what it is.
That's why I've settled on APS-C mirrorless as the sweet spot for people who want lightweight and compact, with decent image quality.
It is only if you f/4 lenses on APS-C are enough for you.
If you need f/2,8 zooms (for speed and DOF), then, FF with f/4 zoom ends up being similar in term of weight, bulk … and cost.
If you need f/1,4 on APS-C, the f/1,8 on FF are cheaper, lighter, less expensive so you indeed save money.
So the real question is what is "decent image quality" threshold for you.
On my case, I am fine with f/4 zooms and 1,8 primes on FF and it is ending up much cheaper, smaller, lighter than a comparable kit on APS-C.
I think quite a few people, who are new to mirrorless, are going to be in for a shock at how large these Z lenses are going to be.
I think they will be sock how good they are. I think that people do not realize that we are not speaking of Nikon / Canon DSLR version of 50mm f/1,8 but closer to OTUS quality.
The Z hype and marketing promise compact, fast primes - but in Nikon's 3 year roadmap, you don't see any fast primes. Why?\
I think they are right. I complained indeed about Nikon not planning the f/4 versions of the 14-24 or 70-200. I think that people will realize that you have primes which are already at the top in term of performance wide open and will make for a very high quality, light and compact kit.
For instance, the Canon 85L was fast but honestly, its quality at f/1,2-1,4 was severely lacking. It is soft. And the transmission is quite poor where I gain just 1/3 of a stop going from 1,8 to 1,2. So anyway, I had to stop down to 1,6 or 1,8 to get good sharpness, enough DOF and because there was almost no light deficit.
Now, with the Sony FE 85mm (which is as good as Zeiss Batis version from my father), I have even better quality than the Canon at 1,8 and I have the stabilization (of the sensor).