Tamron's original development of proprietary core technologies such as
Aspherical element production, Multiple Cam Mechanism and Integrated Focus Cam
design lend to the creation of the world's lightest, most compact 11x zoom lens
made for digital SLR cameras.
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Zoom in for a macro shot
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AF18-200mm F/3.5-6.3 XR Di II Highlights
Di II
Lenses are designed for exclusive use on digital cameras with smaller-size
imagers and inherit all of the benefits of our Di products. These lenses are not
designed for conventional cameras and digital cameras with image sensors larger
than 24mm x 16mm.
Extra Refractive Index Glass (XR)
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Special glass for better performance and more compact lens
designs
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Extra Refractive Index (XR) glass can bend light rays at steeper angles, thereby
decreasing the physical length of the lens while enhancing imaging performance
by minimizing optical aberrations. This has allowed Tamron to develop a line of
shorter, smaller-diameter, lighter lenses without sacrificing lens speed, and
actually upgrading image quality compared to older designs. XR glass is costlier
than conventional glass but it yields enhanced optical power distribution,
making possible many of the outstanding and innovative lens designs that bear
the XR designation. XR glass, with its superior light-bending power, makes it
possible to design a short-barrel lens with the same light-gathering ability
(aperture value) as a long-barrel lens—even with a smaller lens diameter. By
using this principle Tamron has been able to shorten the length of the entire
optical system and produce lighter, more compact lenses of the same speed, and
also to provide greater zoom ranges in lenses that are much more convenient to
carry by hand.
Low Dispersion (LD)
Low dispersion (LD) glass elements in a lens help reduce chromatic aberration;
the tendency of light of different colors to come to different points of focus
at the image plane. Chromatic aberration reduces the sharpness of an image, but
glass with an extremely lowdispersion index, has less of a tendency to separate
(defract) a ray of light into a rainbow of colors. This characteristic allows
the lens designer to effectively compensate for chromatic aberration at the
center of the field (on axis), a particular problem at long focal lengths (the
telephoto end of the zoom range), and for lateral chromatic aberration (towards
the edges of the field) that often occurs at short focal lengths (the wide-angle
end of the zoom range.)
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Low Dispersion (LD) Glass for Greater Lens Sharpness
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Internal Focus (IF)
Internal focusing (IF) provides numerous practical benefits to photographers
including a non-rotating front filter ring that facilitates the positioning of
polarizing and graduated filters, and more predictable handling because the lens
length does not change during focusing. Even more important, Tamron’s Internal
Focusing (IF) system provides a much closer minimum focusing distance (MFD)
throughout its entire focusing range. In addition, IF improves optical
performance by minimizing illumination loss at the corners of the image field,
and helps to suppress other aberrations that become more troublesome at
different focusing positions.
Zoom Lock
Another original Tamron mechanical engineering concept is the Zoom Lock (ZL), a
simple convenience feature that prevents undesired extension of the lens barrel
when carrying the camera/lens unit on a neck strap.
Tamron AF 18-200mm f/3.5-6.3 XR Di II LD Aspherical (IF) Macro Zoom Lens for
Canon Digital SLR Cameras