AstrHori 28mm f/13 360° Rotating Macro Probe Review

The AstrHori 28mm Probe Lens is a $1400 specialized tool that lets you shoot macro from inside a flower. It's brilliant for its niche and useless for everything else.

Focal Length 28mm
Max Aperture f/13
Mount L-Mount
Stabilization No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 1361 g
AstrHori 28mm f/13 360° Rotating Macro Probe lens
22 Overall Score

The 30-Second Version

The AstrHori 28mm Probe Lens is a brilliant solution in search of a very specific problem. If you don't know exactly why you need it, you don't need it.

Overview

The AstrHori 28mm f/13 Macro Probe Lens is a fascinating piece of optical engineering that does exactly one thing: it gets your camera into places no other lens can. It's not a general-purpose lens, it's a specialized tool for capturing a world of tiny details from impossible angles. The one thing to know is that you're buying a microscope with a camera mount, not a traditional lens. It's slow, heavy, and weirdly brilliant at its specific job.

Performance

The optical quality is surprisingly good, landing in the 98th percentile in our database. That's the shocker. For a lens this bizarre, the images are sharp and detailed where it counts. The real performance story is the experience: you're maneuvering a 3-pound, foot-long probe to frame a shot inches from your subject. It's less like photography and more like surgery. The tiny f/13 aperture means you need a ton of light, but it also gives you a massive depth of field, which is perfect for keeping entire miniature scenes in focus.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.4
Bokeh 10.9
Build 2.8
Macro 72
Optical 97.8
Aperture 10.9
Versatility 37.5
Social Proof 4.8
Stabilization 37.9

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Strong optical (98th percentile) 98th
  • Strong macro (72th percentile) 72th

Cons

  • Below average build (3th percentile) 3th
  • Below average social proof (5th percentile) 5th
  • Below average aperture (11th percentile) 11th
  • Below average bokeh (11th percentile) 11th

The Word on the Street

0.0/5 (5 reviews)
👍 Early adopters are thrilled with the utterly unique perspectives it unlocks, calling it a creative game-changer for niche work.
🤔 Users love the concept but admit it gathers dust between specialized shoots, confirming it's a tool, not an everyday lens.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Focal Length Min 28
Focal Length Max 28
Elements 21
Groups 16

Aperture

Max Aperture f/13
Min Aperture f/40

Build

Mount L-Mount
Format Full-Frame
Weight 1.4 kg / 3.0 lbs

AF & Stabilization

Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 480
Max Magnification 2:1

Value & Pricing

At $1,398, the value proposition is razor-thin and entirely depends on your needs. If you're a product photographer, scientist, or extreme macro enthusiast who needs this specific probe capability, it's probably worth every penny because nothing else does this. For everyone else, it's a wildly expensive paperweight. There's no hedging here: you either need this tool or you absolutely don't.

$1,398

vs Competition

Don't even look at standard primes like the Viltrox 35mm f/1.7. They're in a different universe. The real question is whether you need a probe lens at all. If you just want great macro, a dedicated macro lens like a Laowa 100mm f/2.8 2x Macro will give you better image quality, a wider aperture, and autofocus for half the price. But it can't go inside a flower bud or dip into a fish tank. The Tamron 17-70mm f/2.8 is a versatile zoom, but its 'macro' capability is a joke next to this. This lens has no direct competitors—it's in a category of one, for better or worse.

Spec AstrHori 28mm f/13 360° Rotating Macro Probe 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 Tamron Di III Tamron 17-70mm f/2.8 Di III-A VC RXD Lens for Sony Canon RF Canon RF 24mm f/1.8 Macro IS STM Lens Nikon NIKKOR Z Nikon NIKKOR Z 24-70mm f/2.8 S II Lens (Nikon Z)
Focal Length 28mm 55mm 35mm 17-70mm 24mm 24-70mm
Max Aperture f/13 f/1.4 f/1.7 f/2.8 f/1.8 f/2.8
Mount L-Mount Nikon Z Fujifilm X Sony E-Mount, Sony E-Mount, Sony E-Mount, Sony E-Mount, Sony E-M Canon RF Nikon Z
Stabilization false true true true true true
Weather Sealed false false false false false true
Weight (g) 1361 281 400 544 272 676
AF Type - STM STM Autofocus Autofocus Autofocus
Lens Type - - - Wide-Angle Zoom Wide-Angle Wide-Angle Zoom
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product AfBokehBuildMacroOpticalApertureVersatilitySocial ProofStabilization
AstrHori 28mm f/13 360° Rotating Macro Probe 46.410.92.87297.810.937.54.837.9
Meike 55mm F1.4 Standard Aperture APS-C Frame AF STM Compare 95.681.881.189.167.588.137.589.987.8
Viltrox Air 35mm F1.7 f/1.7 AF Compare 95.673.663.493.27480.537.595.187.8
Tamron Di III 17-70mm f/2.8 -A VC RXD Compare 46.459.264.377.490.854.692.595.187.8
Canon RF 24mm f/1.8 Macro IS STM Compare 46.481.887.68182.575.837.59899.9
Nikon NIKKOR Z 24-70mm f/2.8 S II Compare 46.471.672.172.49754.685.49887.8

Common Questions

Q: Can I use this as a regular lens?

No. The f/13 aperture is too dark for normal photography, the focus distance is fixed very close, and it's huge. It's a macro probe, period.

Q: Is the image quality any good?

Surprisingly, yes. The optics are top-tier for this weird design. Don't worry about sharpness; worry about getting enough light on your tiny subject.

Q: Do I need a special setup to use it?

You'll need a very sturdy tripod and likely a focusing rail. At 2:1 magnification, any camera shake ruins the shot. Patience is your most important accessory.

Who Should Skip This

If you're looking for a versatile macro lens or your first foray into close-up photography, this isn't it. It will frustrate you. Go get a Laowa 100mm f/2.8 2x Macro instead. You'll take better pictures immediately and have $700 left for a nice tripod.

Verdict

We can only recommend the AstrHori Probe Lens to a very specific user: the professional or obsessive hobbyist who already knows they need to shoot from inside, under, or through their subject. For that person, it's a revolutionary tool. For any general photographer, even one interested in macro, it's a confusing, expensive, and limiting choice. Buy this lens to solve a specific problem, not to explore a new genre.