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

The AstrHori 28mm f/13 Probe Lens can create macro photos unlike anything else. But is its unique perspective worth the sky-high price and major limitations?

Focal Length 28mm
Max Aperture f/13
Mount Nikon Z
Stabilization No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 1361 g
AstrHori 28mm f/13 360° Rotating Macro Probe lens
22 Totaalscore

The 30-Second Version

The AstrHori 28mm f/13 Probe Lens is a one-trick pony, but that trick is magic. It offers a unique probe-style perspective for incredible macro shots, but the fixed f/13 aperture and manual-only focus are major limitations. Only worth it for pros who need this specific tool.

Overview

The AstrHori 28mm f/13 Macro Probe Lens is a tool, not a lens. It's a single-purpose instrument for getting your camera into spaces and perspectives nothing else can. Forget everything you know about normal photography. This is for extreme close-ups, product shots, and exploring tiny worlds.

With its long, skinny barrel, 2:1 magnification, and a built-in LED ring light, it's designed to go where other lenses can't. It's a full-frame lens for Nikon Z mount, but its fixed f/13 aperture and manual focus-only operation mean you're buying it for one very specific job.

Performance

Optically, it's surprisingly sharp for what it is, landing in the 98th percentile. That means the glass is good, and you can get crisp, detailed macro shots at 2:1 magnification. But the performance story is all about trade-offs. The fixed f/13 aperture means you need a ton of light (or high ISO), and forget about any background blur—bokeh is in the 10th percentile. Autofocus isn't a thing here, so you'll be manually focusing by moving the camera back and forth. It's a slow, deliberate process.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.4
Bokeh 10.9
Build 2.8
Macro 71.9
Optical 97.8
Aperture 11
Versatility 37.5
Social Proof 4.8
Stabilization 38

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Unmatched perspective for tight, creative macro shots. 98th
  • Built-in LED ring light is essential and works via USB-C. 72th
  • The front barrel is waterproof for submerged shooting.
  • Optical sharpness is excellent for its specialized design.

Cons

  • Fixed f/13 aperture severely limits light and creative control. 3th
  • No autofocus makes precise framing a slow, fiddly process. 5th
  • It's heavy, bulky, and comically impractical for anything but macro. 11th
  • The build quality feels cheap for a $1400 lens. 11th

The Word on the Street

0.0/5 (5 reviews)
👍 Users love the completely unique, creative perspectives it enables for macro and product work.
🤔 Many note it's a fun, niche tool they're happy to own but admit it rarely comes out of the bag.
👍 The submersible front element and built-in LED light are frequently praised as essential, well-executed features.

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 Nikon Z
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. You are paying a premium for a hyper-specialized tool with a build quality that ranks in the 3rd percentile. For that money, you could buy a superb standard macro lens and a whole lighting setup. This only makes financial sense if your photography business requires this exact probe-style perspective and you'll use it to make that money back.

US$ 1.398

vs Competition

Don't compare this to the Viltrox 35mm or Tamron 17-70mm. Those are versatile, everyday lenses. This is the opposite. A fairer comparison is to a proper macro lens like the Laowa 100mm f/2.8 2x Macro. That lens gives you similar magnification, a much wider aperture for light and blur, and better build, often for less money. But it can't snake into a keyhole or hover over a circuit board. The AstrHori's only real competitor is itself—if you need a probe, this is one of the few games in town for Nikon Z.

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 Nikon Z 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 46.410.92.871.997.81137.54.838
Meike 55mm F1.4 Standard Aperture APS-C Frame AF STM Compare 95.681.881.289.167.588.137.589.987.8
Viltrox Air 35mm F1.7 f/1.7 AF Compare 95.673.663.593.27480.637.595.287.8
Tamron Di III 17-70mm f/2.8 -A VC RXD Compare 46.459.264.577.490.854.692.595.287.8
Canon RF 24mm f/1.8 Macro IS STM Compare 46.481.887.78182.575.837.59899.9
Nikon NIKKOR Z 24-70mm f/2.8 S II Compare 46.471.672.372.49754.685.49887.8

Common Questions

Q: Is this lens autofocus?

No, it's manual focus only. You focus by physically moving the camera closer or farther from your subject.

Q: Why is the aperture fixed at f/13?

The probe design requires a long, narrow barrel, which physically limits how wide the aperture can be. It's a trade-off for the unique shape.

Q: Can I use it for anything other than macro?

Not really. The f/13 aperture means it's terrible in low light, and you can't get any background separation. It's a dedicated macro instrument.

Who Should Skip This

If you're looking for a general-purpose or even a standard macro lens, skip this immediately. Its terrible low-light performance, lack of autofocus, and complete inability to blur a background make it awful for portraits, events, or everyday use. You'll hate it.

Verdict

Buy this only if you are a commercial product photographer, a serious macro hobbyist with a specific creative vision, or a scientist documenting tiny subjects. It's a brilliant solution to a very niche problem. For everyone else, it's an expensive, frustrating novelty that will collect dust after the first weekend of playing with it.