Nikon 500 PF Initial Specs Review

Update – see he full field report here.

You know, I feel sort of bad for the new Nikon 500 PF lens.

With all the hype and hoopla surrounding the new Z6 and Z7 mirrorless cameras, this lens sort of got lost in the shuffle. In fact, I think Nikon should have given it an announcement day all its own. The truth is, it’s looking like a fairly impressive piece of glass. As a “first batch” user of the Nikon 300 PF (one of my favorite lenses), I’m looking forward to seeing how this one compares in the field. 

However, the lens isn’t available just yet, although the specification are. In the video below, we’ll take a walk down Tech Spec lane and I’ll give you my take on this hunk of glass. 

 

PS – If you enjoyed this post, I think you’ll REALLY like my e-books, Secrets To Stunning Wildlife Photography and Secrets To The Nikon Autofocus System. They’re filled with hundreds of pages of information just like this. Check ’em out – click here (hey, it’s free to look 🙂 )

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Gilbert Rolland
Gilbert Rolland
6 years ago

Steven, Have you heard some thing about a new Nikkor 600mm PF 5.6. I have already the Nikkor 200-500mm and this lens with the TC14 seems a great format for bird photography. Thank you and have a good day.

Joseph Smith
Joseph Smith
6 years ago

Hi Steve and others. I have had my new Nikon 500mm f5.6 for about two weeks now. I find it easy to use, image quality is great and AF acquisition is better than I had anticipated. I have not done a lot of low light shooting yet, so I have not tested out the AF in those conditions. I have uncovered on BIG PROBLEM, the lens foot on the tripod collar mount. (The tripod collar mount is fixed to the lens and is not replaceable. ) I picked up the lens by the foot and the next thing I knew… Read more »

Carl Milliken
Carl Milliken
6 years ago
Reply to  Steve Perry

Steve, the RRS replacement foot for the Nikon 200-500mm fits the 500mm f5.6 pf perfectly. I have had the lens for a couple of weeks and no problems with the replacement foot. Oh, the lens is very sharp, quick to focus, and the VR works very well.

John Grgas
John Grgas
6 years ago

How do you know when your af is locked on the bird?

Chet
Chet
6 years ago

If you test one of these, make sure you take a close look at the VR. On my D850, it has the same problems the 300PF has. At shutter speeds around 1/100, the VR is not good at all. Otherwise, it seemed like a nice lens, but not worth the premium over the 200-500, IMO. Sharpness was about the same compared to my copy.

Bruce
Bruce
6 years ago
Reply to  Chet

In your original post on the lens you mentioned shooting at 1/100s in burst mode and naturally VR is not going to be effective and actually counterproductive in such a situation. What is important is how fast the camera can lock focus for wildlife photography and this is where I have found the 80-400mm lens to be more effective than the 200-500mm lens on my D500 camera in the field with fast moving subjects.

Ralph F Smith
Ralph F Smith
6 years ago

Great article as usual but my question is more to do with small birds around eastern PA. I want to improve cropped picture quality. I have a d500 and a 200-500 f5.6. To improve cropped quality I could 1) buy a d850 but not sure that pixel density is that much better than my d500, 2) replace my 200-500 with a 180-400 f4 tc1.4 – 1 stop better and faster focusing but big big bucks or 30 assume my 200-500 (which was rebuilt under warranty last month) will be good in that range but buy a 600mm f4 prime??? Suggestions?… Read more »

Kevin Lohman
6 years ago

Steve! You are a bad influence. I ordered the 500PF. Hoping it will ship within the next 2-3 weeks. And I am still sorting through photos from Costa Rica! Loved the workshop! https://www.kevinlohman.com/Wildlife/CostaRica/

Kevin Lohman
6 years ago
Reply to  Steve Perry

Thanks Steve. Say hi to Dennis and Diego, and sing “hello” to Olympia!

Smith
Smith
6 years ago
Reply to  Steve Perry

I bought the 500fp yesterday, and it wowed me a lot . I mount it on d850,I found when i magnify the image a lot ,it is still as sharp as not magnified. Unbelievable! Does the 200-500 has a similar result in this case,Steve?

Jeff
Jeff
6 years ago
Reply to  Smith

My experience is the 200-500 isn’t as sharp as the 500PF. It is still a good lens though if you make sure to get a good copy (Nikon has some variation). I do have both, but haven’t shot much with the 500PF much yet as the weather has been lots of grey lately hear in the Pacific Northwest. However, so far I really like what I’ve seen.

Bob
Bob
6 years ago

If you were to buy just one lens for what you do (nature photography) would you purchase something like this Nikon 500 pf or say a 200mm – 500mm zoom or 80mm – 400mm lens? How often does the zoom function come into play? It seems like top photographers are always pushing for longer lenses in favor of zoom lens. Thanks.

Bruce
Bruce
6 years ago

Having a 500mm lens with the size and weight of a 70-200mm f/2.8 zoom lens is on the surface quite appealing. But my 500mm f/4 was also usable as a 700mm f/5.6 lens with a near doubling (96%) of the image size at 700mm. I will be traveling to Alaska and due to PenAir’s onerous carry-on restrictions I will be leaving the 600mm f/4 behind and taking the 200-500mm instead. If i had the 500mm f/5.6 lens I would be leaving it at home and taking the 200-500mm f/5.6. With a prime telephoto and larger critters there is a tendency… Read more »

Murli Ranganathan
Murli Ranganathan
6 years ago

Hi Steve:
Thank you for that crisp pre review. Am waiting for the detailed one. I just bought the 200-500mm for hand shots about 2 months back and now i feel bad. If i had known that this lens was coming along shortly, i would have preferred to wait. I had got the 200-500mm since i found lugging the 600mm f4 (the old one and heavier) quite irksome.
By the way, those e-books were great and am waiting eagerly for the third one.

Walter Baliero
Walter Baliero
6 years ago

Hi Steve.
As always, I pay attention to all your posts. I own – among others lenses – the 500 mm f/4 which I use plus TC1.4 for bird photography. Looking at this new 500 PF I think will wait until the 600 PF appears – can’t afford the “real one 600” – then my thought is that in this case I will have 600 PF + TC1.4=840 mm for tripod shots and the 500 PF for hand held, so I will cover a nice range of shooting. What do you thing about my idea?

Dinuka
Dinuka
6 years ago

Hi Steve, if you have to chooes one from 400f2.8 500f4 600f4 (all Nikon) to buy as your prime lense for brids and wildlife which one will be your pick. I’m considering buying one prime and cant decide which one to buy ( would be lovely to have all of them if I can afford). I do own 200-500 f5.6 currently and thinking of keeping it with the prime lens. Any adivice is highly appreciated.

Markku Sulonen
Markku Sulonen
6 years ago

Hi Steve,

Thanks for the great video. Yes, this makes me hungry for having this peace in hands. I think you say something that this lens maybe handheld in the fields, as well as some comments below. As far as you will write about your field experiences, pls, comment on this. Now, I have both 300PF and 200-500. The former is a great performer, even with 1,4 TC, handheld. The 200-500 is close to that but not exactly, due to its weight. Now, my expectations are that 500PF could be better in that respect.

B.r: Markku

Peter
Peter
6 years ago

How does the Nikon 200-500 compare to the Tamaro G2 150-200 and is either one better than the Tamaro G1 150-600. When do you think the 599P will be aailable to test against both of the above lenses to see if the cost of almost 3x is worth it
Thanks

חתול
חתול
6 years ago

the thing i would really want to see (and almost no videos ever show) is the autofocus speed. not only from the viewfinder view, but also from the focus distance “window”. the 70-200 f2.8E for an example is extremely fast, that window does actually indicate the real life autofocus speed. only when the lens is aimed at the sky without the cap on :).

Georg
Georg
6 years ago

I love the 500 FL f4. I think this lens is even not to heavy for the hand shutting sometimes. I use 300 PF f4 with 1.4 teleconverter. It is OK but I don`t love this lens. I can not see any reason for purchasing this 500 f 5.6 lens, waste of money

חתול
חתול
6 years ago
Reply to  Georg

waste of money? clearly you dont hike and walk in thick bush or in thick forests. just try walking with a huge lens/huge bag/huge anything in the israeli bush.. just try. this 500mm f5.6 is PERFECT for me, since i ONLY walk and search for gazelles and wild animals to photograph. a 500mm f4 is too long, too thick and too heavy to walk around with, run around with, or climb on a tree with when you are chased by an angry wild boar (which didnt happen to me, but im ready for everything, i encounter them often.). this 500mm… Read more »

Paul Digney
Paul Digney
6 years ago

I have (and love) the 300PF. It almost always has the 1.4x TC behind it so I’m using it at f 5.6. This is a lot more money than that combination and heavier. But I only go from 420mm to 500. I’ll be interested in what you think about the trade-off when you get your hands on it.

ADDAL K R
ADDAL K R
6 years ago

As usual, you are wonderful, my only concern with this lens is, if light conditions are overcast or you can say low light, then what will happen ? I don’t think it is possible to fit my 1.7 tele converter, even with d850.

Chris
Chris
6 years ago
Reply to  Steve Perry

Do you mean the TC-1.7 III or TC-2.0 III would get beyond the F/Stop range?

david cowles
david cowles
6 years ago

Thanks Steve very comprehensive as always. He is Australia it will be a lot more $ however. I have an unrelated question. I see on some of your web videos that you sometimes use a Flash Extender over your Flash. I gather this is for subjects up in the tree in some shadow? my Nikon sb-5000 flash has a separate diffuser dome & good reach up to 20m. I believe? What would be the advantage of having a flash extender wrapped around the flash. Would it spread the light wider and more even ? Does it not annoy the subjects/critters… Read more »

Shanti LFE
6 years ago
Reply to  david cowles

I use the Magmod flash extender,easy & portable as folds down..so far birds have not really cared about it–no reactions..can’t say for bigger mammals..might piss off a bear 🙂

PETER CLAUSSEN
PETER CLAUSSEN
6 years ago

Thanks for the initial thoughts. I’m an amateur and I think this is a better option for me than a 14K lens. ordered one. If you and the family want to stay at 9000 ft in the rockies let me know

PETER CLAUSSEN
PETER CLAUSSEN
6 years ago

Thanks for your books….Thanks for the initial thoughts. Ordered this one

Gary Irwin
Gary Irwin
6 years ago

Thanks for the “initial specs” review Steve! Everything about this lens looks stellar…except for the fact that it’s f5.6. I’ve been shooting wildlife (birds) long enough to know that f5.6 just doesn’t cut it for action shots which I’m “focusing” on since Nikon released the D500/D850. So as much as I’m impressed with the 500PF specs, I keep coming back to the idea that a 500E is my best, most versatile companion to my 600E, even though they’re just 100mm apart.

Gary Irwin
Gary Irwin
6 years ago
Reply to  Steve Perry

Exactly Steve…even though there’s only 100mm difference between them, the 500E is a completely different experience than then 600E, the latter increasingly being restricted to tripod use (not the way I prefer to shoot). On paper the 500PF sounds like a perfect lens, but there are just too many times where I need f4, so I just can’t shake the feeling that after spending all that $$$ on a new 500PF, the smart move would be to locate a lightly used 500E from someone trading to the 500PF. Now there’s a plan! 😉 All that being said, I’ll probably pick… Read more »

Gary Irwin
Gary Irwin
6 years ago
Reply to  Steve Perry

Well whatever you decide Steve, I sure hope you get your hands on one…your practical reviews can’t be beat.

Thern
Thern
6 years ago
Reply to  Steve Perry

Well I’m with Gary on this.
I can’t nor will sacrifice a full stop willing to take the penalty for the longer heavier and dearer lenses.
I had a 600 F/4 plus 200-400 F/4, substituted those with the 600E and 180-400.
Personally I really think this combo has a lot more to offer than a 500 prime plus the 600 you allready own.

Jeff
Jeff
6 years ago
Reply to  Thern

Old thread but since I now have a 600G (really heavy) 500E and 500 PF I can tell you that if you are not in really low light situation the 500 PF is possibly the best walking around long lens you can buy. 500PF and D850 w/grip and large battery is only 6.38lbs which is less than the 500/f4. With a D500 without grip it is 5.63lbs. So if needing to hike a long ways I think it will be the perfect lens. My opinion of course and others may think I’m completely wrong. Also, I have put, but not… Read more »

Bill Anderson
Bill Anderson
6 years ago

Steve, I agree completely. Wildlife photographers probably should be focusing (no pun intended) more on this lens than the 1st generation Z cameras. I am also curious; did you ever make a final decision on the 180-400 f/4 zoom lens? Thanks for your videos. Bill

Jack
Jack
6 years ago

Good info Steve. Waiting for the 600 PF f4 . . . Would you rather have the 500 PF f5.6 or the 300 PF + 1.7 TC at 5.6?

Shanti LFE
6 years ago
Reply to  Steve Perry

Yes but the 1.4TC on 300PF is 5.6 @420 , & 80mm is not much difference(with D850) ..hope you test both

Janet Zinn
6 years ago

I’m sooo tempted to get this lens for all the reasons you mention. But what do I do with my 500 F4E which I have only had less than a year?? Selling it would be like selling my firstborn (if I had one lol.) And I’d surely lose money on it. But, I am afraid I’d find little reason to carry the big prime if the baby brother is as good as Nikon is claiming. Thank you for pointing me to the article on fast glass, those are all great and valid reasons for the F4, especially (for me) the… Read more »

Brian Bernard
6 years ago

Steve, you made mention in your video of the Sport Mode, and that you leave it on on your 200-500mm. Does that mean you leave VR on all the time with the 200-500mm regardless of shutter speed?

Eric
6 years ago
Reply to  Steve Perry

Hello, i am from my point of view a little bit disappointed that it will not be the 600/5.6PF at first, but anyway:
you are right, the lightweight und (i hope) good af speed should be a really good argument for this new 500/5.6PF.
One thing more, you said: “I often see a drop in acuity”, you mean the 200-50 and the 300/4pf..
for me the same, in sport mode nothing. i hope the new 500/5.6PF will do not have this “little” problem.
i wish you a good time in CR

Bruce
6 years ago

I am curious on how this will perform with a 1.4 TC, it would be fantastic (and I’m probably dreaming) if, like the expensive 180-400, it performs just about as well with a TC WITHOUT having to be stopped down. I traded in my 300PF because it needed at least 2/3rds of a stop, and usually a full stop down before it was tack sharp (at least F7.1 and I usually shot at F8). Can’t wait to see your review.

Bruce
6 years ago
Reply to  Steve Perry

I wondered about that myself but I did see other photographers, and reviewers, talk about the need to stop down a little using a 1.4 TC with that lens. Brad Hill has been writing about the 180-400 being one of the first “aperture independent sharpness” lens he’s seen, commenting that even great lens with a TC almost always need a little stopping down to reach maximum sharpness. I suspect the truth, for me, was somewhere in between, I had an ok, but not great copy. At the end of the day though, even with a 1.4 TC I didn’t have… Read more »

Bruce
6 years ago
Reply to  Steve Perry

That is a nice shot of the plover. Of course you have a LOT of nice shots that I’ve seen. 😉 I do pixel peep and want tack sharp at 1:1. The reason for that is not just that I’m obsessive (really!) but because I’m always cropping due to the small birds and I really need the pictures to be sharp when I do that. That said, what often passes for an unsharp lens is really an untuned lens. I have enjoyed both your books, and have gotten some great tips from your autofocus guide. Love your website.

ABHIJIT BANERJEE
ABHIJIT BANERJEE
6 years ago

Thanks Steve. I will eagerly waiting for your review about the 1.4 TC III performance with this 500 PF lens. I have used 1.4 TC III with 200-500 on D500 but sharpness drop noticeably.

Jack Palmer
Jack Palmer
6 years ago

Perhaps you have Abhijit, but if you haven’t you should auto-fine the AF for the 300 Pf + 1.4 TC III combo. I did and the sharpness tended to increase or at least no longer back-focussed. And the AF fine tune value was different for the combo than for the 300 PF alone. Jack

Michael Goodman
Michael Goodman
6 years ago

Thanks Steve for your always insightful thoughts esp. for wildlife photographers!

Adam
Adam
6 years ago

Thanks, Steve! I agree, looks very appealing and at a price that is fairly inexpensive… for Nikon! I’ll be curious to see where this fits in your work. I have the 600 f4 and 300 pf also and as cool as this looks, I’m not sure it fills a necessity. I’m only a hobbyist but this certainly wouldn’t replace the 600 and with the 1.4 TC, the 300 pf closes the gap, and is a killer hiking set up. Definitely a slamdunk for someone that doesn’t want to dive into the big 500 or 600. Curious, did you end up… Read more »

Steve Swope
Steve Swope
6 years ago

I ordered mine last week, should be in September 14th

Dagny Gromer
6 years ago
Reply to  Steve Swope

I pre-ordered one last week as well. I was looking at the 300mm PF + 1.4 TC when I heard the 500mm was coming so I waited. I have used the 300mm PF (don’t own one) and I need more focal length than it had.

Shanti Lfe
Shanti Lfe
6 years ago

Looks tempting,but my 300pf+ 1.4 @ 420 may be just as sharp?? 80mm is no big deal.. but the 600 pf is another story I hope. Look foward to your tests Steve.

Phil
Phil
6 years ago

Looking forward to your field review of the 500 PF.

Especially interested in how it does optically and AF wise compared to the 200-500mm on long end and also with a 1.4x III TC.

Nikon should be dropping another shoe sometime in future with a 600/5.6 PF. That will be very interesting unless it’s co$t is way more than the 500 PF.

https://nikonrumors.com/2018/02/01/the-latest-nikon-patents-400mm-500mm-and-600mm-f-5-6-phase-fresnel-pf-lenses.aspx/

Gary Haigh
Gary Haigh
6 years ago

Great point on focus acquisition when using the 200-500 Steve. I find my greatest loss of shots is due to the camera hunting for focus, sometimes never managing to lock on in time. I do however like the zoom range of the 200-500 which is a luxury you will not have with the 500 PF

Bruce Herrick
Bruce Herrick
6 years ago

Can we have a written review? No time to watch videos.

Troy Phillips
Troy Phillips
6 years ago

I think it is a great price for what you’re getting. I have the 300 f/4 afs . Got it in the mail from B&H the exact same day the 300pf was advertised for preorder. Kind of wish I’d have switched up on the lenses. B&H did make that offer to me. Just mainly for the better af.
This is where this new 500 of should really shine . Those light weight elements and a d5,500 of 850 locking on should be extremely quick. Can’t wait for the review

Ian Douglas
Ian Douglas
6 years ago

A real shame (as usual) that Nikon UK translate the USA dollar price into UK pounds at an exchange rate of 1:1 which makes this a very expensive lens in the UK 🙁
Also it will be interesting to see the flare performance of this lens in the field (a weak point of the 300mm PF F4).

Brian Bernard
6 years ago

It will be interesting to see how this new lens compares to the 200-500mm once its available, considering they are both f/5.6 at 500mm