The new AF-S NIKKOR 800mm f/5.6E FL ED VR lens is the longest lens currently available from Nikon, and is also the longest autofocus lens ever produced by Nikon.
What is the longest zoom lens?
- Sigma 200-500mm f/2.8 APO EX DG Ultra-Telephoto Zoom Lens. ...
- Canon EF 1200mm f/5.6 L USM Lens. ...
- Leica APO-Telyt-R 1:5.6/1600mm Lens. ...
- Nikkor 1200-1700mm f/5.6-8.0 Lens. ...
- Canon 5200mm f/14 Tele-Monster.
How far can an 800mm lens see?
Technical data
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Close focus distance
Max. magnification
Diaphragm blades
Construction
How far can a 600mm lens zoom?
All lenses can see up to infinity. If you want to see how large are it covers then that is the relation between the focal length and the sensor size. On a full frame sensor 600 mm lens covers 3.6 meters horizontally at 60 meters. On an APS-C sensor it covers only about 2.3 meters.
What is the magnification of a 600mm lens?
This characteristic results in a 1.5x equivalent magnification factor of your lens. A 600mm f/4 AF-S mounted with a Nikon D1h is a 900mm f/4 equivalent lens.
What does 600mm zoom mean?
If there are two, they're the shortest and longest focal length of a zoom lens. The larger the number, the narrower the angle of view. On a full-frame DSLR, a 200mm lens will fill the frame with a view that's about 10° wide; a 600mm lens captures a view that's only around 3.4° wide.Dec 30, 2015
What is a 600mm lens used for?
600mm (and Above) Prime These lenses are ideal for professional sports and wildlife photographers who like to shoot subjects that are very far away with very wide apertures. The images these lenses can capture and the effects they create can be stunning!
What does 600 mm lens mean?
The larger the number, the narrower the angle of view. On a full-frame DSLR, a 200mm lens will fill the frame with a view that's about 10° wide; a 600mm lens captures a view that's only around 3.4° wide.Dec 30, 2015
How do you convert mm to magnification?
Just move the decimal point two places to the left and multiply by 2. Here is an example: For a 300mm lens, divide 300 by 50 to get 6x magnification. Or divide 300 by 100 to get 3, then multiply 3 x 2 to get 6x. Another example: For a 100mm lens, divide 100mm by 100 to get 1.