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Tamron Americas enhanced benefits for its 6-year lens warranty

Par : PR admin
7 mars 2026 à 19:55


Yesterday, Tamron Americas announced updates to its 6-Year Limited Warranty program, aimed at providing more value and support for photographers and videographers in North America. This enhancement builds on their existing warranty, which offers coverage for defects in materials or workmanship for six years from the date of purchase when purchased from an authorized retailer.

The current lineup of Tamron lenses can be found here:


Additional information:

Key Details and Eligibility

  • The enhanced benefits are available for Tamron lenses purchased from authorized Tamron Americas retailers or the official Tamron Store.
  • Applies to customers in the United States, Canada, and Mexico.
  • To access the full benefits, the lens must be registered with Tamron Americas according to their guidelines.
  • New benefits (marked below) are effective for eligible lenses purchased and registered on or after January 1, 2026.
  • Full terms and details can be found on Tamron’s warranty registration page.

Benefits for Registered Users

Registering your lens unlocks product support, company updates, event invitations, educational seminars, and potential qualification for the Tamron VIP Club. Specific warranty perks include:

  • Authorized repairs using original Tamron parts.
  • Free annual external clean and check service.
  • New: Accidental damage coverage – 50% off repair charges for non-warranty issues like liquid, impact, or sand damage within the first six months of purchase.
  • New: $50 bonus rebate toward purchasing a new Tamron lens.
  • New: Free replacement of zoom and focus rubbers.
  • New: 25% savings on replacement hoods, front caps, and rear caps.
  • Lens replacement for unrepairable units – In-warranty replacements are free (same or equivalent model); out-of-warranty may qualify with applicable charges.
  • Repair replacement review – If the same issue requires a third consecutive repair, the lens may qualify for replacement.

Additional information is available here.

New Tamron 35-100mm f/2.8 DI III VXD lens announced (Z/E)

The post Tamron Americas enhanced benefits for its 6-year lens warranty appeared first on Photo Rumors.

What else is new?

Par : PR admin
7 mars 2026 à 17:02


Here is what else is new:

Leica SL3 savings in the US

Limited to 25 pieces: new Oberwerth LEO camera bags 2.0 developed in cooperation with Leica Society International

OM Digital Solutions at the Photography Show (schedule of events)

FUJIFILM GFX100S II and FUJIFILM GFX100 II Will Only Ship With English and Japanese Languages

Fujifilm Updates Smartphone App “instax UP!™” to Significantly Improve Scan Accuracy of instax™ Prints

Sony Camera Tips You Might Not Know and Sony Monitor & Control App

CP+ 2026: Sigma CEO Kazuto Yamaki on Unprecedented Lens Demand, APS-C, AI, and Market Trends


Here are the latest Nikon news and rumors:

NASA Artemis II astronauts will take the 10-year-old Nikon D5 DSLR camera around the moon, here is why

The Nikon Coolpix P1100 and P950 super-zoom cameras are now $100 off

Meike temporarily stopped selling Z-mount lenses in China, all Chinese lens brands got a warning from Nikon

Huge Nikon price increase in China – up to 42% for some lenses

Stores and distributors in China are removing all Sirui Z-mount lenses

Lomography Nour Triplet V 2.0/64 “Bokeh Control Art” lens for Nikon Z-mount now available

New Nikon Spring discounts launched in Europe

Detailed report on the Nikon and third-party Chinese Z-mount lens manufacturers

Nikon US rebates for March

The shipment of the new Nikon Nikkor Z 70-200mm f/2.8 VR S II lens could be delayed

The post What else is new? appeared first on Photo Rumors.

Viltrox 35mm F1.2 Lab for Z mount: sample gallery and impressions

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DSC 1617.acr
Nikon Z8 | Viltrox AF 35mm F1.2 Lab | F5.6 | 1/800 sec | ISO 64
Photo: Mitchell Clark

Late last year, Viltrox announced that it was bringing its 35mm F1.2 Lab lens to Nikon's Z mount. Given that the company pitches its Lab lenses as including "flagship optical design," we're happy we got the opportunity to test one out in a variety of conditions.

Image quality

DSC 1739.acr
Nikon Z8 | Viltrox AF 35mm F1.2 Lab | F1.8 | 1/125 sec | ISO 64

Wide-open, we found that the 35mm F1.2 Lab has good levels of sharpness in the center, and does a decent job at maintaining that to the edges. It's not quite as sharp as the best F1.2 optics we've seen, but for the price, it's hard to complain about the performance of our copy. Vignetting is also around what we'd expect for an F1.2 lens, almost entirely clearing up around F4.

I find the lens' out-of-focus rendering to be quite pleasing, but at F1.2, the cat's eye effect on the specular highlights outside the center of the frame can be a bit lopsided and uneven in a way that can be distracting if your background only has a few bright lights in it (the effect is less noticable if the bokeh is made up of several light sources blending together). By F2 the bokeh is closer to circular, but past that it becomes a bit more geometric.

DSC 2087.acr
F1.2 F1.4 F2 F2.8 F4 F5.6

We found that the lens maintained contrast well, even when shooting with bright backlight, and that it resisted flare in all but the most intense conditions.

If you go looking for chromatic aberration, you'll definitely find some, but it's typically not distracting in all but the most challenging scenarios.

Usability

To start with the elephant on the camera, this is a large, heavy lens. However, that comes with the F1.2 territory, and it's not unduly so; it's actaully lighter than Nikon's own 35mm F1.2 S (though around 23% heavier than Sigma's second-gen 35mm F1.2). While it wouldn't be my first choice as a travel lens, I never felt particularly burdened by it as I carried it around Japan while I was there for CP+.

viltrox 35mm f1p2 lab on z8 in hand
The Viltrox AF 35mm F1.2 Lab Z isn't big and heavy for a F1.2 lens, but it is still big and heavy. I also don't find the top display to be especially useful or aesthetically pleasing, but your mileage may vary on that.
Photo: Becky O'Bryan

While we don't make it a point to test gear's weather sealing, I did end up shooting in light rain for an hour or two with this lens, and it didn't miss a beat, and has continued to work afterwards with no issues. I'm not saying that you'll definitely get the same results, or that this lens is capable of withstanding any weather, but it did at least hold up well when I got caught in a drizzle.

The control ring is a bit of a mixed bag. It's nice that it can be clicked or declicked, especially for controlling aperture, but the control is inconsistent. Sometimes I would turn the ring one click, and the aperture wouldn't change at all, and I'd have to turn it a few more clicks to get it to go up or down 1/3 of a stop. Sometimes, though, one click was enough. This inconsistency basically put me off using it entirely, though I'd be interested to see if it performs the same way on a Sony body.

Viltrox control ring
It can take several clicks of the control ring to get the aperture to change at all.

The lens's autofocus motors are relatively quick and responsive, though it doesn't quite seem capable of immediately snapping from minimum focus to infinity like other lenses with linear motors we've tested. It's hard to say how much of this is on the camera, though. I also found that my Z8 was hunting for focus or slightly missing it more frequently than I'd expect, based on my experience using it with other first-party or officially licensed lenses.

While the lens was still very usable, this issue was prevalent enough that I checked to make sure there wasn't a firmware update available that might improve it; at the time of writing, there is not, though the company did just release one for the E-mount version of the lens.

Summary

DSC 1154.acr

Pictured: my friend ogling the Leica Noctilux M 35mm F1.2 Asph., a lens that costs around $8500 more than the Viltrox. While I'd certainly rather carry the Leica around, I'm not sure I actually liked the images it produced that much more (though the Lab's slightly odd bokeh is highlighted in this picture).

Nikon Z8 | Viltrox 35mm F1.2 Lab | F1.2 | 1/30 sec | ISO 3200

While you can certainly find things to complain about with the images it produces, it's worth remembering that the Viltrox 35mm F1.2 Lab for Z mount costs $1000. That's substantially less than F1.2 lenses typically cost, especially the ones from first-party companies like Nikon. The Nikkor 35mm F1.2 S may have nicer bokeh, sure, but it also costs three times as much, so it had darn well better.

With that said, we'd typically urge anyone thinking about picking up this lens to at least consider how much benefit they really expect to get from the extra 1/2 or 1EV it provides compared to its F1.4 and F1.8 rivals. If you're willing to give up the extra speed, you can get a lens with fewer compromises, and that will be significantly smaller and lighter, a proposition that I personally find very tempting. Many will also be cheaper, too.

If you absolutely need F1.2, this is one of the most affordable ways to get it

However, if you absolutely need F1.2, this is one of the most affordable ways to get it (at least, if you want modern amenities like autofocusing, which, believe me, is very nice to have if you're shooting such a fast lens). And while I've gone over some of my complaints with it, it's still a very competent lens capable of producing great images. It does a lot of things reasonably well, especially given its price.

The final wrinkle is, of course, that Nikon is currently taking legal action against Viltrox, so the future of the company's lenses on Z mount is a bit up in the air at this point. That may be something worth keeping in mind if you're looking at spending what is still a fair chunk of change on this lens.

Sample gallery
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