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Absolutely the correct posting on a Nikon forum...Come on Canon, give us a sensor that takes full advantage of those TS-E lenses!
Here's resolution shots by digital picture made on a 1Ds3 (21 megapixel) on the samyang, here compared with the Nikon PC-E 24 on a D3s (24 megapixel, ie tiny bit smaller pixel pitch):
Samyang 24 tilt-shift vs Nikon PC-E 24
note that there seems to be an error when you choose +12 or -12 shift sometimes show supersharp images (could be some web browser caching bug on my side though) so you need to look at both +12 and -12 to and pick the worst
In medium format terms +12mm shift means +17mm for 48x36mm sensors and +19mm for 54x41mm sensors. You can look at the more normal shifts 6mm instead (ie corresponding 8mm / 9mm on medium format).
You can also compare to the Canon TS-E 24mm II which currently is "as good as it gets", I own that myself and consider f/10 to be ideal shooting aperture on that, it's not really an f/8 lens.
A few comments on the results: The Samyang is really bad wide open, maybe so bad that it can make focusing on live view difficult especially with the lens shifted? Stopped down to normal shooting apertures it looks decent, but at the extreme 12 mm shift still the Nikon has better contrast and sharpness. The Nikon has more chromatic aberration but that is quite easily fixed in post-processing while the general fuzz of the Samyang is harder to sharpen. At the more normal 6mm shift and f/11 the Samyang looks quite good actually, *maybe* better than the Nikon depending on sample variations, but you need to stop down because at f/8 the Nikon has the advantage again.
Good price/performance of the Samyang, and great to have independent tilt/shift, but a small step down in image quality from the Nikon PC-E 24, except possible with smaller shift at f/11.
I don't think it's decentering, but some wrong in the images. The -6 and -12 don't even show the same distortion, my guess is that the wrong images have been stored, those images look unreasonably good for maximum shift for any lens.It seems to me that the lens is badly decentered, -12 pretty good (v.slightly better than the Canon) but +12 pretty bad. I had cancelled my backorder but if both shifts were as good as -12 I'd probably reorder
To my eternal social shame, I was never a member. Had I been, I'd probably be prime minister now, rather than a tired old photo hack...Tim, love the all new improved avatar, the old one was just so Bullingdon Club :grin:
Thanks for the link. It shows the same huge difference between shifts. 2 screwed up tests?Here's a full review on Lenstip: Samyang T-S 24 mm f/3.5 ED AS UMC review - Introduction - Lenstip.com