Hi John,
The Otus lenses are all 1/1.4 designs, that is probably the reason the 135/2 APO has no Otus designation. I am aware that 135/2 APO is a match for the Otuses according to the late Dr. Hubert Nasse. My impression is that he was a great guy, sharing much of his knowledge and he will be missed.
I think the 135/2 was around before the Otus concept materialized. The classic version has been converted into the Milvus line, with nothing but a case makeover (to its detriment IMO). If you look at the LenScore rankings, the 135/2 is just a tad less spectacular than the Otus glass, but (at 1207) it's certainly head-and-shoulders over everything else at that focal length. Right now, the classic 135 f/2 is a steal at $1499. The rendering is quite lovely.
The Milvus 50/1.4 has been redesigned with a Distagon like front group, quiet similar to the Otus, but doesn't correct axial chroma fully. Lack of "colour bokeh" is to a great part what you pay for with the Otus.
AFAIK, the Zeiss "classic" lenses are based on designs developed for Contax/Yashica, quiet old designs that is. That doesn't mean they are not good, but technology has made advances since that time.
Best regards
Erik
Agreed. Again, if you look at
LenScore, the only pre-Otus Zeiss lenses clearly better than the competition (in their class) were the 15 f/2.8 Distagon T*, the 100mm f/2.8 macro, and the 135 f/2 telephoto. The rest of the Zeiss classics (despite their beautiful appearance) are actually pretty average when measured. Even the "legendary" Zeiss 21mm f/2.8 had a so-so ranking of 886, and its Milvus upgrade is still only 927, which is very good, it's still below the Classic 15mm Distagon T* at 974. (1000 is considered outstanding.)
The Milvus replacements are about 80% "pretty average" also, still floating in the 700-900 range, with the 85mm being an outstanding exception, at 1231, on a par with the 135 f/2. The Milvus 50mm, at 1054, is on a par with the newly released Nikkor 105 E f/1.5, at 1044, but lacks AF. Don't get me wrong, I love MF lenses, prefer them actually, but only if they provide a decided advantage.
According to LenScore, the Otus Series are the
only Zeiss lenses that compete in the "super-telephoto" 1300+ quality range ... while the majority are floating around with the Nikkors and Canons in the 700-900 range. That makes them not worth the money IMO.
Interestingly, 2 of
the very bottom-ranked lenses are Zeiss (the 18 f/3.5 Distagon and the 50 Sonnar T*), while the worst two lenses of all (thus measured) ... are both Sony. In fact, of The Bottom 20 lenses measured, 9 are Canons, 7 are Sony, 3 are Zeiss, and only 1 is a Nikon.
That ranking gets reversed on The Top 20 lenses measured: 8 are Nikon, 6 are Canon, 3 are Zeiss (Otus only), 2 are Leica, and 1 is a Sigma.
In my quest to upgrade my lens portfolio, I have acquired 2 of the Zeiss lenses, the 15mm f/2.8 Distagon T* and the 135mm f/2 Apo Sonnar T*, but would not purchase any other Zeiss over its Nikon counterpart ... except the Otus. The prices are eye-watering, but the image quality is (literally) in a class by itself at those focal lengths. Don't know why they have those rubber rings though
At that price point, the Otus rings should be made of ribbed metal, like the classic Zeisses used to be, as well as the
Leicas 2 of which occupy the same Über-Class.
With the Nikkor 28 f/1.4E coming out, and showing a level above everything else, but just a notch below the Otus 28 f/1.4 in even focus distribution, but being sharper in the center, with equal-quality bokeh, I think that will be the direction I go. Am waiting to see Nikon's E f/1.4 versions of the 50mm and 85mm too ... both long overdue ... being 9 and 7 years old, respectively.