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.
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.
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.
Price History
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.