Nikon's 6 worst lenses: corroborate or undermine. Post yours.

I always find KR to be good for cold hard facts, his opinion I leave behind. Every lens and every camera he uses, is the BEST MOST SUPERB AMAZING WONDERFUL

Agree!!

Some of my better photos came from that supposedly crappy 35 80..

I also had the Nikkor AF 35-80/4.0-5.6 and found it a very good performer(!) sharp, contrasty and low on distortion. Plus compact and light.

My preferences were for FD 85 1.8, FD 135 2.5, and R 90 2 and 2.8 lenses, and not in that order.

An established classic, and the predecessor Canon R 135/2.5 is even better! I paid lots of cash for mine and gave away the FD version!
 
I agree with the sentiment - the 43-86 was not very good - and another 'lemon" was the 58mm f1.4! .

Perhaps not good at wide open sharpness, but on image quality, particularly the quality of the out of focus highlights, it is the best Nikon normal lens i own. The best. I love it so much i will probably own it till I die.
 
I have one. It's not bad at all as a walkaround lens as long as you don't use the 105mm part. 28mm is not too bad. It's not quite as sharp as a good prime lens but it's just me who can see the difference.

I bought my first 28-105mm copy off fleabuy in rough condition, with a small front scratch and rough/dry zoom and focus action. Still, it's sharp and focuses quickly and accurately. I then bought another copy (in mint condition) to replace my first beat up one, but I found it softer and not as quick or accurate in focusing. I sold it and kept the really worn first copy, which I still use with my D700, etc. Seems like there is a bit of sample variation, expected for a kit lens.
 
I've read this a lot. I don't doubt you. But I really like mine. ...
Maybe I'm not as demanding as some. Maybe I have a decent version of it. I don't know.

I like my 35mm AFD copy too. Good enough center sharpness wide open. Many mention soft corners wide open, but I shoot mostly people/street/reportage style so edge sharpness is not a priority. I guess it depends on one's style and needs.

Every time I consider jumping to the newest f/1.4 or f/1.8 version, I note the increased size, weight and costs, and the improved corner image quality (real but marginal for me) and step away from the ledge.
 
I've had great results with my 300/4.5. Very useful both in photography and photomacrography as a tube lens with a microscope (infinity) objective in front of it.

The only time I've seen colour fringing was with a 2x converter and even then only with subjects against a distant/clear background (e.g. blue sky).
 
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