I find quite a few quoting not using expensive filters on cheap lenses a bit strange.
While the lens may be cheap, sticking on a lousy filter will only serve to make things worse.
If the lens is cheap but gives superb pics, put on a cheap filter?
Between $80 and a $20 filter. Why give up IQ for ALL your pics for $60?
If the lens is so cheap that it doesn't deserve a good filter, means it takes crap pics, you shouldn't be using it at all and the topic of filters is irrelevant.
I find quite a few quoting not using expensive filters on cheap lenses a bit strange.
While the lens may be cheap, sticking on a lousy filter will only serve to make things worse.
If the lens is cheap but gives superb pics, put on a cheap filter?
Between $80 and a $20 filter. Why give up IQ for ALL your pics for $60?
If the lens is so cheap that it doesn't deserve a good filter, means it takes crap pics, you shouldn't be using it at all and the topic of filters is irrelevant.
sinned79 said:simple, if the lens cost only $130 (for example canon 50mm f1.8), will u buy a filter that cost almost 3/4 or the same price of the lens to use it.
but of cos if your lens cost more then $400 and above to even a few thousand dollars, what is a $100 UV filter that protects your expensive equipment?
simple economics.
bottom line, Hoya Pro1 digital is good and cheap much much better then Tokina glass UV filter (this doesn have coating!) but thickness coating wise, B+W XS-Pro series is better but more costly of cos.
I'm not comparing brands. The point is about putting on good decent filters and not be guided by the price of the lens.
Yes, I will put a $100 filter on a $150 lens or for that matter a $50 lens.
Point is to put on a good filter or none at all, nothing to do with brands or cost of the lens.
I'm not comparing brands. The point is about putting on good decent filters and not be guided by the price of the lens.
Yes, I will put a $100 filter on a $150 lens or for that matter a $50 lens.
Point is to put on a good filter or none at all, nothing to do with brands or cost of the lens.
u dun get what i mean.
as a hobbyist, nothing hurts more than accidentally bumping on my lens' front element.
Dropping the camera with the len's front element facing down hurts more!
I have seen a shattered B+W that saved the lens.
While one can be careful, we can't control others and the terrain.
NikF601 said:I agreed too, specially you need to climb up some rocky area to composite your shoots. Can easily loose balance.
well.. this is subjective. apparently it worked for you. So its good for you..but that dosent mean it will work for anyone else u see. eg for me. i mentioned before if the lens is not a thousand or few.. i dont put a very good filter (in some case i dont even use). Since i dont find the need to protect it so much. (yes i know how cheap the lens is..its still cost more than a $150 filter). But for lens that goes over a thousand or two or more.. its no brainer i will use better filter so to give me a better and more sense of protection.I'm not comparing brands. The point is about putting on good decent filters and not be guided by the price of the lens.
Yes, I will put a $100 filter on a $150 lens or for that matter a $50 lens.
Point is to put on a good filter or none at all, nothing to do with brands or cost of the lens.
I'll do a 'u dun get what I mean" and we can go on with this
Its all about putting on a good filter or nothing and I believe we agree on this.
sinned79 said:to summarise, of cos i know the importance of good UV filters, in fact i am using B+W xs-pro series for all my lenses
but what i am trying to say here, what pushes me to buy such good UV filters also depends on the value of the lens.
for example, i only use B+W xs-pro for my below lens which cost me all more then $1k.
35mm f1.4, 135mm f2, 17-40mm f4
but for my old MF lens below
yashica 50mm f1.4 (which cost me ard $200 with adapter)
olympus 200mm f4 (which cost me ard $200 with adapter as well)
i choose to go without, cos i cannot justify spending half the amount of what i paid for to protect these lens.
likewise, for 50mm f1.8, if spoilt, i just buy new one, but imagine
50mm f1.8 + expensive UV filter = spend x2 $100 = spoilt
buy another 50mm f1.8 = spend x1 $100
total = $300
i can buy 3 50mm f1.8!
most importantly, back to TS question, there is a difference in high end filters
Cheap filter (Tokina glass, no coating)
- Flares problem
- Hard to clean (leaves smudges)
- Poor construction
- Degrades your photo quality
High end filter
- Minimal flares problem
- Easy to clean
but whether to go for cheap or high end UV filters, u decide yourself if your lens are worth it or can simply go without it!
ombre said:Also, Hoya HD selling point is that it is hardened glass, 4x harder to break so they say. If you think this is an important point, I beg to differ.
I manage to find a cheapo emolux ($10 or less) filter I wanted to discard. Just out of curiousity, I seriously abused it. Slammed it hard on the floor, whacked it really hard with a high quality hardened steel sewing scissors. Used the scissors to scratch (under much pressure) the glass.