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Nikon has manufactured nine different zoom lenses with a focal-length range of 80 to 200 mm range for its F-mount 35mm film cameras and latterly its digital SLR lineup. They were all released during the film camera era, but are compatible with Nikon's subsequent digital SLRs. All lenses have a push-pull design except where noted:
3× optical zoom, 3.3× digital zoom: August 2002 Olympus America, archived from the original on 1 January 2007: Olympus C-4040 Zoom: 4.1 3× optical zoom, 37.5× digital zoom: August 2001 Olympus America, archived from the original on 23 October 2006: Olympus C-450 Zoom: 4.0
The EF 100–400 mm f / 4.5–5.6L IS USM is a professional EF mount telephoto zoom lens manufactured by Canon Inc. The first version of this lens was announced in September 1998, and an updated version was announced in November 2014. It is a high performance telephoto lens most often used for sports and wildlife photography.
Nikon 1 V1 with Nikkor VR 10-100mm f/4.5-5.6 PD-Zoom and ME-1 stereo microphone in HD-video use The Nikon 1 Nikkor VR 10-100 mm f/4.5-5.6 PD-Zoom for the 1 series' unique CX format ( crop factor 2.7) is a Superzoom lens manufactured by Nikon , introduced in September 2011 for use on Nikon CX format mirrorless interchangeable-lens cameras .
The Canon EF-S 18–55mm lens f / 3.5–5.6 is a Canon-produced wide-angle to mid telephoto zoom lens for digital single-lens reflex cameras with an EF-S lens mount. The field of view has a 35 mm equivalent focal length of 28.8–88mm, and it is a standard kit lens on Canon's consumer APS-C DSLRs.
Handheld. Zoom 72×, Optical zoom 10× and Digital zoom 7.2× taken in full resolution 16 MP, but resize to 2 MP for uploading, ISO 800, 1/680, F/14.0, more noise, but the detail is more clear. Magnification in deteriorated digital zoom zone is 72×: 10 = 7.2×, the bigger the number, the worse the image
The AF-S DX Zoom-Nikkor 18-70mm f /3.5–4.5 G ED-IF is an F-mount zoom lens manufactured and sold by Nikon. Designed exclusively for use on Nikon DX format cameras, this lens covers from wide-angle to medium-telephoto range. This lens was announced in January 2004 [2] and was initially available as kit lens for the then-new Nikon D70. Later ...
It is the successor of the Canon EOS 350D, and upgrades to a 10.1 megapixel CMOS sensor, a larger continuous shooting buffer, an integrated image sensor vibrating cleaning system (first used in a Canon EOS DSLR), a more precise nine-point autofocus system from the EOS 30D, improved grip, and a bigger 2.5-inch (64 mm) LCD with 230,000 pixels and a larger viewing angle which replaces the top ...