Laowa Aurogon FF 10-50x NA0.5 Supermicro APO Review

The Laowa Aurogon isn't a lens you use for normal photos. It's a 6.6kg microscope that captures detail invisible to the naked eye, but it fails at everything else.

Focal Length 19mm
Max Aperture f/10
Mount Sony E
Stabilization No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 6611 g
Lens Type Ultra Wide-Angle
Laowa Aurogon FF 10-50x NA0.5 Supermicro APO lens
24.5 Puntuación global

Overview

The Laowa Aurogon FF 10-50x isn't a normal lens. It's a microscope. Forget landscapes or portraits. This 6.6kg beast does one thing: it gets you closer to tiny subjects than almost any other lens on the planet. It's a supermicro APO system with a fixed focus distance, designed for scientists, researchers, and maybe the most hardcore macro photographers alive.

Performance

For its one job, it's peerless. The 50:1 maximum magnification is in the 100th percentile for macro. Nothing else touches it. But that's where the good news ends. Everything else suffers. The f/10 maximum aperture is dim, the build quality is rock-bottom at the 0th percentile, and there's no autofocus or stabilization. It's a single-purpose tool that excels wildly at that purpose and fails at everything else.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.2
Bokeh 14.4
Build 0.1
Macro 99.9
Optical 35.9
Aperture 12.1
Versatility 37.3
Social Proof 54.2
Stabilization 37.7

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Strong macro (100th percentile) 100th

Cons

  • Below average build (0th percentile)
  • Below average aperture (11th percentile) 12th
  • Below average bokeh (13th percentile) 14th
  • Below average optical (32th percentile)

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Type Ultra Wide-Angle
Focal Length Min 19
Focal Length Max 19

Aperture

Max Aperture f/10
Diaphragm Blades 9

Build

Mount Sony E
Format Full-Frame
Weight 6.6 kg / 14.6 lbs

AF & Stabilization

Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 20
Max Magnification 50:1

Value & Pricing

At $1499, it's a niche tool with a niche price. You're not paying for versatility or build quality. You're paying for access to a magnification range normal lenses can't reach. If you need 10-50x magnification on a full-frame camera, this is basically your only option. For anyone else, it's a complete waste of money.

2057 CAD

vs Competition

Don't compare this to normal lenses like the Viltrox 35mm f/1.7 or the Sony 15mm f/1.4 G. Those are for general use. This isn't. Even dedicated macro lenses like the Laowa 100mm f/2.8 2x macro only go to 2:1 magnification. The Aurogon goes to 50:1. It's in a totally different league, and that means comparing it to anything else is pointless. Your choice is: do you need to see the pores on a dust mite? If yes, get this. If no, look literally anywhere else.

Verdict

Buy this only if your work absolutely requires microscopic imaging on a full-frame camera. We're talking scientific documentation, ultra-fine detail inspection, or art projects focused on the unseen world. For standard macro photography, videography, or any kind of general use, this lens is a terrible, expensive, and heavy mistake. It's a brilliant one-trick pony, but that trick is incredibly specific.