Canon JINTU 420-1600mm Telephoto Zoom Review
The JINTU 420-1600mm lens gets you to focal lengths normally reserved for pros, but the image quality and handling pay the price. For $95, it's a wild experiment.
Overview
Let's be real upfront: the Canon JINTU 420-1600mm lens is a fascinating, weird piece of gear. It's not a 'good' lens in the traditional sense, but for $95, it does one thing that almost nothing else can: it gets you to 1600mm. If you're a beginner who wants to see the craters on the moon or a bird on a distant branch without spending thousands, this is your ticket. Just know you're buying a very specific, very compromised tool, not a polished photographic instrument.
Performance
The biggest surprise is that it works at all. At 1600mm, you're dealing with an incredibly narrow field of view and any tiny movement is magnified. The image stabilization helps, but it's a battle. Image quality is what you'd expect for the price—soft, with lots of chromatic aberration, especially at the long end. It's a 'see it' lens, not a 'print it big and sell it' lens. The manual focus is stiff and hunting for sharpness at 1600mm is a patience-testing exercise.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Strong versatility (90th percentile) 90th
- Strong stabilization (85th percentile) 88th
Cons
- Below average build (4th percentile) 4th
- Below average bokeh (28th percentile) 27th
- Below average aperture (29th percentile) 30th
- Below average optical (35th percentile) 35th
Specifications
Full Specifications
Optics
| Type | Telephoto |
| Focal Length Min | 420 |
| Focal Length Max | 1600 |
Build
| Mount | canon ef, ef-s |
| Weight | 1.2 kg / 2.7 lbs |
AF & Stabilization
| AF Type | Autofocus |
| Stabilization | Yes |
Focus
| Min Focus Distance | 800 |
Value & Pricing
For $95, it's a steal if your goal is purely to reach out and touch something far away on a sensor. You're not paying for optical excellence; you're paying for focal length access. As a learning tool or a toy for specific, distant subjects, it's worth it. As a daily driver lens, it's not.
Price History
vs Competition
Don't compare this to standard zooms like the Canon EF-S 17-85mm or the Panasonic 14-140mm. Those are general-purpose lenses. This JINTU is a hyper-specialist. A more relevant, though still imperfect, comparison is to a used super-telephoto prime. You might find an old 500mm mirror lens for a similar price, but you lose the zoom flexibility. The JINTU's value is in its absurd range. Compared to any proper telephoto from Canon, Sigma, or Tamron, it loses on every metric except price and maximum reach.
| Spec | Canon JINTU 420-1600mm Telephoto Zoom | Meike Meike 55mm F1.4 Standard Aperture APS-C Frame AF | Viltrox Air VILTROX 35mm F1.7 f/1.7 Air AF Lens for Fuji X | Fujifilm VILTROX 56mm F1.4 STM APS-C Frame Auto Focus | Sirui Sniper Sirui Sniper 56mm f/1.2 Autofocus Lens (Sony E, | Yongnuo YONGNUO Upgraded YN50MM F1.8S DA DSM II Lens, for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Focal Length | 420-1600mm | 55mm | 35mm | - | 56mm | 50mm |
| Max Aperture | - | f/1.4 | f/1.7 | f/1.4 | f/1.2 | f/1.8 |
| Mount | canon ef, ef-s | Nikon Z | Fujifilm X | Fujifilm X | Sony E | Sony A, Sony E |
| Stabilization | true | true | true | true | true | true |
| Weather Sealed | false | false | false | true | false | false |
| Weight (g) | 1207 | 281 | 400 | 320 | 422 | 198 |
| AF Type | Autofocus | STM | STM | STM | Autofocus | STM |
| Lens Type | Telephoto | - | - | - | - | - |
| Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare |
| Product | Af | Bokeh | Build | Macro | Optical | Aperture | Versatility | Social Proof | Stabilization |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canon JINTU 420-1600mm Telephoto Zoom | 46.4 | 26.6 | 3.5 | 50.1 | 34.6 | 29.7 | 90.2 | 71.8 | 87.8 |
| Meike 55mm F1.4 Standard Aperture APS-C Frame AF STM Compare | 95.6 | 81.8 | 81.1 | 89.1 | 67.5 | 88.1 | 37.5 | 89.9 | 87.8 |
| Viltrox Air 35mm F1.7 f/1.7 AF Compare | 95.6 | 73.6 | 63.4 | 93.2 | 74 | 80.5 | 37.5 | 95.1 | 87.8 |
| Fujifilm VILTROX 56mm F1.4 STM APS-C Frame Auto Focus Standard Prime Compare | 95.6 | 81.8 | 88.8 | 85.3 | 34.6 | 88.1 | 37.5 | 86.7 | 87.8 |
| Sirui Sniper 56mm f/1.2 Autofocus Compare | 46.4 | 96.7 | 73.8 | 53.4 | 79.8 | 95.9 | 37.5 | 98 | 87.8 |
| Yongnuo Upgraded YN50MM F1.8S DA DSM II Compare | 95.6 | 68.8 | 90.1 | 90.6 | 34.6 | 75.8 | 37.5 | 86.7 | 87.8 |
Verdict
Buy this lens with very clear expectations. If you're a curious beginner, an astronomy dabbler, or someone who needs to identify distant wildlife and doesn't care about pro-level sharpness, go for it. It's a fascinating experiment. If you need reliable autofocus, good build quality, or sharp images, save your money for a used quality telephoto. This is a one-trick pony, but for $95, it's a pretty wild trick.