ปีผลิต
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ผลิตที่
Japan
สูตรเลนส์
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อัปเดต
4 ก.ค. 2569
Minolta MD · 50mm · f/1.7
ปีผลิต
-
ผลิตที่
Japan
สูตรเลนส์
-
อัปเดต
4 ก.ค. 2569
The Sears 50mm f/1.7 was a rebadged standard prime sold under the Sears house brand, a common practice in the 1970s-80s when American retailers like Sears commissioned Japanese optics manufacturers to produce lenses under their own name. The reviews sampled here cover the Pentax K-mount version of the 'Auto Sears MC 50mm F1.7,' though the same optical design was distributed across multiple mounts. As a 'nifty fifty' of the era, it was a budget-friendly, all-purpose standard lens made in Japan and featuring multi-coating ('MC'). Its cult following, as evidenced by the reviews, stems almost entirely from its exceptional value: reviewers repeatedly praise it as a cheap, capable performer, with an average street price under $20 and a perfect 10 value rating. One reviewer humorously invoked a Frank Zappa lyric ('Is that a real Poncho or a Sears Poncho?'), questioning whether a Sears-branded lens could be 'real,' and concluded it was 'a nice little lens.' No established community nickname beyond the generic 'nifty fifty' category is evidenced. The manufacturer of this specific copy is unknown from the reviews.
สรุป: A budget standard fifty that punches well above its bargain-bin price. The Sears 50mm f/1.7 is ideal for the value-conscious shooter who wants a sharp, lightweight lens for close-ups and portraits. Reviewers unanimously recommend it, praising its sharpness and unbeatable value, while noting occasional wide-open softness on distant subjects.
ได้รับการให้คะแนนโดยรวมค่อนข้างดี (คะแนนเฉลี่ยจากชุมชน 9.0) แม้คะแนนรายบุคคลจะแตกต่างกันไปในช่วง 7–9
ให้ความคมสูงมากสำหรับการถ่ายระยะใกล้และภาพบุคคล (ความคมตรงกลางเฉลี่ยประมาณ 9.2) โดยผู้รีวิวคนหนึ่งในตอนแรกพบว่าภาพนุ่มเมื่อใช้รูรับแสงกว้างสุดกับวัตถุระยะไกล แต่ต่อมาพบว่าสาเหตุเกิดจากความผิดพลาดของผู้ใช้
The Sears 50mm f/1.7 was a rebadged standard prime sold under the Sears house brand, a common practice in the 1970s-80s when American retailers like Sears commissioned Japanese optics manufacturers to produce lenses under their own name. The reviews sampled here cover the Pentax K-mount version of the 'Auto Sears MC 50mm F1.7,' though the same optical design was distributed across multiple mounts. As a 'nifty fifty' of the era, it was a budget-friendly, all-purpose standard lens made in Japan and featuring multi-coating ('MC'). Its cult following, as evidenced by the reviews, stems almost entirely from its exceptional value: reviewers repeatedly praise it as a cheap, capable performer, with an average street price under $20 and a perfect 10 value rating. One reviewer humorously invoked a Frank Zappa lyric ('Is that a real Poncho or a Sears Poncho?'), questioning whether a Sears-branded lens could be 'real,' and concluded it was 'a nice little lens.' No established community nickname beyond the generic 'nifty fifty' category is evidenced. The manufacturer of this specific copy is unknown from the reviews.