I've been meaning to perform this test for quite some time, but I've finally gotten around to it. As some may know, I've been searching for the holy grail of wide-angle lenses for some time. I had a 17-40L which turned out to be bested by my 16-35L. I had a Sigma 20/1.8 that didn't quite cut the mustard. I had a Canon 20/2.8 which came close but didn't quite make it either. Against those 3, my 16-35 came out on top.
So now, I took out the Zeiss-Jena 20 mm f/2.8 Flektogon and gave it a whirl against the Canon 16-35L at 20 mm (well, 19 in a couple of shots, but close enough). Here's how it fared.
Testing was done in such a manner that I tried to keep things as equal as possible. The Zeiss consistently exposed a bit higher so I tried my best to compensate and equalize the exposure either with exposure compensation in-camera or in DPP. All shots were raw, and both lenses were taken through a series of f/2.8 to f/8 in 1-stop increments. In hindsight, I probably should have shot f/11 and f/16 as well. Maybe next time.
Test camera was the 5D. CZ was manually focused using the angle finder at 2.5X magnification with a couple of runs to make sure I had the best focus. Focus was on the power line pole. The Canon was auto-focused as this is how I intend to use it.
First, the test scene, from a tripod off the back porch:
Now, both lenses at 100% crops, left edge, center, and right edge:
Not much to say after that image - center sharpness was comparable, but the edges on the Jena just fall apart.
Next test was for vignetting and light falloff (probably not a significant problem on 1.6X cameras). I only gave f/2.8 results, though I could have included a couple more stops.
The difference isn't huge, but the CZ/Jena needs to be stopped down to f/4 to equal the Canon's vignetting performance at f/2.8. Performance improves as one stops down, as expected.
Next up was the flare test. Wide angle lenses present more of a problem with flare, so I didn't expect a lot here. Both lenses showed their share of flare spots, but the Canon maintained contrast while the Jena image looks very washed out.
No hood was used in either shot (not that it would have mattered since the sun was in-frame) since I didn't have a hood for the Jena.
And finally, the brick wall test for distortion. Probably the most distorted issue here is the "rough-look" that the bricklayer chose. There are no good verticle lines to follow, though the horizontal lines are fairly indicative of distortion performance.
First, the Canon image:
Note the slight barrel distortion with the more extreme ends straightened out a bit. Very slight "W" wave (sometimes called Moustache distortion) distortion, but not too bad at this focal length (the lens has more at 16 mm).
Now the CZ/Jena:
Similar "W" wave distortion, but a little less barrelly in the middle, and more "pulled out" towards the edges.
Hope this means something to somebody besides me. I guess I'll keep looking for the "holy grail" of ultra-wides. Or maybe I'll quit looking and enjoy this 16-35. Either way, the CZ/Jena is going to have to find a new home as it isn't going to be very useful on the 5D.







