Introduction

In early March, 2012, I pushed away from the desk to go make dinner, bumped the tripod, and knocked the D7000 and reverse-mounted Nikon 75-150mm f/3.5 E-Series face first into the wooden apartment floor.

This fall had two effects: 1) it loosened a wire or something in the MD-D11 battery grip such that the connection between the grip and camera is now intermittent at best, thus rendering it largely useless, and ; 2) it broke the focus mechanism on the E-Series, leaving me without a telephoto solution (but providing me with the brilliant 75-150mm Zomb-E).

I intended to buy another 75-150—and I still might, because I love that lens—but decided instead to go for something with a  bit more reach.

After a great deal of research, I settled on the Vivitar 70-210mm f/3.5 Series 1, which I was able to find for 1/4th the cost of another 75-150. (This lens probably doesn’t need another review—Ken Rockwell has a good one, and there are numerous others out there—but I might do one anyway, some day.)

While looking for the Vivitar and other telephoto zooms on ebay, I came across (and subsequently bought) the Tokina for $35 plus shipping. It was a spur-of-the-moment purchase that I rationalized by claiming that it would satiate my desire for a walk-around zoom. Given the D7000’s 1.5x crop factor, 35-200 translates to roughly 50-300, which in no way, shape, or form can be classified as a decent walk-around lens given its complete lack of any sort of wide angle, so this spur of the moment purchase had, in truth, no justification. But it was maybe $45, shipped, and it is a useful range, sort of, so…

The full name of this lens is the “Tokina AT-X 35-200mm 1:3.5-4.5.” As of November 4, 2012, Tokina does not list this lens in its archive, and the vast majority of google search results lead to discussions on whether or not to purchase the lens, is it sharp, etc., and I’ve been unable to locate much in the way of manufacturing dates or optical formulas, or anything else, really, so I decided to test out and write a nice, long review (with plenty of digressions and regressions) to maybe help remedy the dearth of information out there, or at least add my 2¢. So here it goes:

a brief History of the Tokina AT-X 35-200 f/3.5-4.5 (and a few links)

Tokina AT-X 35-200mm f/3.5-4.5
Tokina AT-X 35-200mm f/3.5-4.5

On the Pentax Forums, in a reply to a “Anybody know anything about this lens” post dated August 30, 2012, user RKKS08 asserts “…the first AT-X version was introduced in 1982 at about $430 US list price. There probably was a SD version before.” RKKS08 goes on to say “It is very ununlikely they didn’t change the optical formula and the coatings several times over the last 30 years. The more, as I know there exist(ed) Tokina SD, SZ-X, AT-X, and AT-X Pro versions of this lens. Just 2 years ago they introduced an AT-X Pro version (AF, Canon mount), which got fairly good reviews in German photo magazines.” RKKS08 also provides a link to a german lens review site; unfortunately, that site is now defunct.

Here’s a short list of a few interesting references to this lens that I’ve come across as of November 4, 2012:

  • Martin Rodensjo took one of these lenses apart, and was kind enough to share a gallery of images of the process.
  • Robert Monaghan‘s oft-referenced Cult Classics lens page has gone missing, but is available through the WayBack Machine and as a pdf. Other than being listed as a “Cult Classic,” there is no specific information on the 35-200.
  • There are a few pictures and some comments on a post at dyxum.com, but much of it applies to the later (presumably) f/4-5.6 version.
  • The Tokina also shows up in an un-dated review/endorsement of Tamron’s 35-210mm f/3.5-4.2 at adaptall-2.org. “[The Tamron] provides better optical performance compared to Tokina’s very popular AT-X 35-200 F/3.5-4.5 zoom lens. Although the Tokina lens was slightly more compact and weighed less, you can definitely discern the differences in the machining tolerances between the two lenses when zooming and focusing. Both lenses exhibit zoom creep when the lens it tilted either up or down, but it takes far more tilt (75 degrees from the horizontal with the Tamron versus 45 degrees with the Tokina) before zoom creep with the Tamron becomes an issue. In a nutshell, the less expensive Tokina lens offered decent performance for the average photographer while the more expensive Tamron lens (with tighter machining tolerances combined with a superior optical design) had better optical performance which met the higher expectations of discerning photographers.”

I told you it was a short list. (Also, by the way, “very popular?” Why, then, has so little information survived or made it onto the interwebs?)

What I like about the Tokina AT-X 35-200mm

Well, given that I paid roughly $40 for it (including shipping), I suppose I can’t complain… much.

Tokina 35-200mm in Close Focus Mode
Tokina 35-200mm in Close Focus Mode

Here’s a short list of the things I like about the Tokina:

  • it has a nice-enough range (though I wish it went a bit wider), going from ~52.5-300 on my D7000
  • it has an aperture ring
  • f/4.5 at 200mm is at least ~2/3 of a stop wider than similar variable aperture lenses from all eras
  • it’s mostly metal and has a nice heft to it
  • it takes 67mm fliters (I only like this because the Vivitar also takes 67mm filters, thus obviating the need for step-up rings, but still…)
  • it was Made in Japan (for what it’s worth)
  • t has a really easy and wildly useful close focus mode: push a release button, spin the lens around, and poof it will focus down to 1:4 at about 3 inches from the front of the lens
  • it cost me less than a trip to the grocer
  • it reproduces colors and contrast in a unique way that has some artistic merit in certain situations

However, if I have a choice between the Tokina and pretty much any other lens in my arsenal, guess what? It usually stays on the shelf unless I have a specific need for it.

Suffice it to say that the lens has a few problems.

The Drawbacks

1) as expected, you’ll find barrel distortion at 35mm, pincushion distortion from ~50mm to ~150mm, and mustache distortion from 150-200mm. If I was a Ken Rockwell sort of lens reviewer, I’d give some notes on how to fix the distortion in Photoshop. Alas, I’m not a Ken Rockwell sort of reviewer, so here are some examples:

This really isn’t a huge problem, as long as you’re not shooting wooden fences or brick walls or putting any horizontal or vertical lines near the edges of your pictures, and it’s completely expected from any lens of this type.

2) the focus changes while zooming. Drastically. So if you get all focused in on a your subject at 200mm, and then zoom out a bit to capture some surroundings, you’ll need to focus again. The more you zoom out (or in) after focusing, the more out of focus you’ll be.

I missed a handful of decent shots before I figured this out.

And it doesn’t help that the lens exhibits a fair amount of zoom creep at even the slightest tilt out of horizontal.

3) The Flare, Oh My God The Flare. Suppose you’re shooting outside during the day. If you want to avoid flare, make sure the sun is behind the front of the lens. I mean, really behind; maybe not 180°, but pretty close.

365-312a-the flare boss the flare-20121104©JamesECockroft
The flare, oh my, the flare…

I really don’t know how to explain this properly, but here it goes:

At 35mm on a 35mm (or full frame digital), the angle of view is 64°; on a crop-sensor, this falls to ~45°. In my experience, the sun needs to be outside of an area at least equal to the angle of view. So if your subject is at 0° and you’re covering 22.5° on each side of the subject, the sun needs to be another 45° outside of that (or at 67.5° or greater) or you’ll get flare.

And this range holds for every focal length, not just the wide end: even at 200mm, you’ll need a good 70° of clearance between the edge of your frame and the sun to avoid flare.

(Does this make sense? A diagram would probably help, but I’m feeling lazy…)

In this shot, the sun was a good 40° out of the frame. Sure, the rainbow blob in the lower right is nice enough, and I know this picture wouldn’t win any awards, and, of course, flare can be employed to nice artistic effect, but still: this is a bit excessive.

This can be mitigated some with a lens hood. I have a collapsible rubber one, but I usually forget to attach it before I go out shooting, and no other lens—even the Vivitar 70-210mm f/3.5—really needs it to the extent the Tokina does.

And the flare totally washes out the image on the Tokina. Other lenses produce some ghosts, or some pretty flare bubbles, but the Tokina just converts the scene to monochrome.

4) it’s very soft wide open, soft enough that I find it mostly impossible to find the green dot at any focal distance, but especially at infinity, and soft enough that nothing is sharp wide open. Sharpness improves, though, and by f/8 it’s sharp as tacks in the center, but still slightly soft in the corners (and remember, I’m shooting this on a camera with a 1.5x crop factor). [I illustrated this back on November 4, 2012, post “365.312 it’s sharp after all!.”]

I imagine this softness would make for some decent portraits, and I’ll try to find a subject on which to test this theory. (Don’t hold your breath…)

5) everything is backwards. Nikon lenses find infinity by turning the focus ring to the right. Canon, Olympus, Pentax, and others all have infinity on the left. So most third party lenses for Nikon (especially manual lens) have this same focusing issue.

I solve this (h/t Ken Rockwell) by imagining that the little green focus arrows in the viewfinder are instructing me which way to turn the bottom of the lens barrel. It’s still a bother, but I tend to get used to it after a couple of minutes, and happily go about the rest of the day.

But that’s not all that’s backwards: it zooms backwards too.

Even the Zoom is Backwards!

With a Nikon push/pull type zoom, you pull in to zoom in, and you push out to zoom out. On the Vivitar 70-210mm f/3.5 Series 1, you pull in to zoom in and you push out to zoom out.

It’s easy to remember: pull in=zoom in; push out=zoom out.

On the Tokina, though, it’s backwards: push the lens out to zoom in; pull the lens in to zoom out. This trips me up constantly, and is a real bother.

6) (and this is the deal breaker, for me… mostly) the color reproduction is washed out, at best, and the contrast is flat. These are both easily remedied in post, but I get better results straight out of the camera with pretty much every other lens on the shelf.

365-110-washed-out-works-sometimes-20120414©JamesECockroft
The sky that day was a brilliant cerulean blue, not a flat steel grey…

It’s simply an issue of time: with any other lens, it takes anywhere from 30 seconds to 4 or 5 minutes to process a picture for the 365 project, or to share to the interwebs; pictures from the Tokina require at least 2 minutes of post work, and the other good qualities of the lens will never beat this out, for me.That said, there are occasions when I like the rather flat contrast and unsaturated color, and given that this is the closest thing I have to a proper super zoom lens, I’ll keep it on the shelf, albeit nearer to the back than others.

I have a few other complaints, but they’re relatively minor: annoying and largely useless half-stop clicks on the aperture ring; and (on my copy) the zoom is rather sticky, which makes very hard to move out of some focal lengths and nigh-on impossible to focus in Macro mode with any accuracy.

Thoughts: tl;dr version

  • barrel distortion (wide); pincushion distortion (~50-150mm); mustache distortion (tele)
  • focus changes drastically when zooming
  • extremely flare prone
  • very soft wide open, soft enough that the D7000 computer has difficulty focusing when it’s wide open
  • focus and zooming are backwards on Nikon
  • saturation and contrast are sadly lacking

Advice

If you find a clean copy of this lens (mine has a tiny bit of mold and a chip in the front element, neither of which cause many issues) in a pawnshop or online for less than $30 or $40, shipped, and you want a manual focus super-zoom-ish lens for FX (or normal-tele zoom for DX), and you appreciate the artistic merits of funky old manual lenses (I should write something about this one day…), and you have the money to spend, buy it.

Otherwise, save up your money and get one of the modern lenses, especially for DX. (Note: I have no experience with other super-zoom type lenses, but I have every expectation that the newer offerings from Nikon, Tamron, Sigma, et. al. are quite a bit better optically, if a bit more cheaply made and less able to produce artistic effects.


So there you have it: my review of the Tokina AT-X 35-200mm f/3.5-4.5! Below, you’ll find some sample images, mostly outtakes from various 365 shoots. (I had to hunt far and wide to find even 7 pictures worth sharing that haven’t already been featured in one of the various 365 posts that feature the Tokina). Most of these were shot wide open in Aperture Priority mode on the D7000 (and probably at -1EV, as that gives the best results with non-CPU lenses in my experience), as I tend to do, and so don’t look too closely, and most received 2-5 minutes of slider play in Aperture.

I hope you found this interesting and/or useful! I had fun making it, for sure, and apologize for taking so long to push it out. I think I’ve been promising this review since April or May…

And this being my first real, in depth lens review, I hope you’ll have some comments or suggestions to help me improve. And if you have any questions, please throw them out there. I’ll be glad to answer them. (Comments are screened prior to posting, FYI.)

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19 Comments

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  1. Hey James, thank you very much for your review! Just leaving a comment here to share how much it still helps in 2021. Cheers and take care!

    1. You’re very welcome, Jojo! I’m glad it’s still proving useful… I almost wish I’d kept that lens, as I’d give it a go on film to see if it performs any better (the Nikon 36-72 that I didn’t care for on digital is really surprisingly good on film). Alas, I donated it or otherwise disposed of the Tokina long ago, long enough that I don’t even have a record of it. Oh well..

  2. On the backwards focusing: sure, it is backwards relative to Nikon and Pentax, but forwards compared to virtually every other camera system. Lens makers didn’t always make special lenses for Nikon and Pentax cameras that focus in the normal direction for those systems.

    On the backwards zooming: zoom direction for a one-touch (push-pull) lens depends on the lens design. A telescoping lens will almost always zoom in when you push out. A one-touch lens that doesn’t change length when you zoom and has a constant aperture will usually zoom in when you pull in. So this lens isn’t really backwards. It’s just backwards compared to the few one-touch lenses you were familiar with. Telescoping lenses are more common now.

    On losing focus when you zoom: a lens that stays in focus when you change the focal length is called a zoom lens, and the property of staying in focus is called being parfocal. This is a zoom lens, and it is parfocal by design. A lens that doesn’t stay in focus is called a varifocal lens. Your zoom lens is probably not parfocal for you because you are using it on an adapter, and the adapter is not placing the lens the correct distance from the camera’s sensor. A small error in the flange focal distance can make the lens quite varifocal. With the right adapter, I’m sure this lens would be almost perfectly parfocal. Unfortunately it is difficult to find adapters with the correct flange focal distance. Adapter makers almost always make the adapter too short, ensuring that you can hit infinity focus even with some imprecision in the lens, camera, and/or adapter. You can fix this by adding shims to your adapter, or using a macro focusing helicoid adapter.

    1. Thanks so much for your detailed and helpful reply!

      Just an FYI, I sold this lens back in 2012, shortly after this post went live. I’m very thankful for the continued interest in this review and I hope my review, and Jacob’s reply, is useful.