DZOFILM DZOFilm X-Tract 18-28mm T8 FF Probe Zoom Lens (0° Review
The DZOFILM X-Tract is a $3,500 lens that lets you zoom during a probe shot. It's a fascinating tool for a tiny niche, but a terrible buy for everyone else.
Overview
The DZOFILM X-Tract 18-28mm T8 is a weird, niche, and wildly expensive lens that does one thing you can't do anywhere else: get a probe-style close-up shot while zooming. That's the one thing you need to know. It's a full-frame probe zoom, which is a bizarrely specific tool. For everyone else, it's a confusing and frankly bad lens. The T8 maximum aperture is painfully slow, it's not stabilized, and its optical performance ranks in the bottom third of all lenses. This isn't a general-purpose lens; it's a single-purpose cinematic effect machine.
Performance
Honestly, the performance numbers are rough. A T8 aperture puts it in the 30th percentile, meaning it's significantly slower than most lenses, so you'll need a ton of light. Its optical score is in the 33rd percentile, so don't expect tack-sharp, clinical images. The real surprise is how poorly it scores for macro, its supposed specialty, landing in the 20th percentile. The 'macro' here is more about the physical probe access than true 1:1 reproduction. You're paying for the unique form factor and movement, not for optical excellence.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Strong versatility (73th percentile) 77th
Cons
- Below average macro (20th percentile) 18th
- Below average bokeh (28th percentile) 26th
- Below average aperture (30th percentile) 30th
- Below average optical (33th percentile)
Specifications
Full Specifications
Optics
| Type | Zoom |
| Focal Length Min | 18 |
| Focal Length Max | 28 |
Value & Pricing
At $3,499, the value proposition is brutal unless you're a working cinematographer who needs this exact, hyper-specific shot. For 99% of shooters, this is a terrible value. You could buy several amazing, fast prime lenses for this price. It's only worth it if that probe-zoom shot is making you money on set.
vs Competition
Don't even think about this if you're comparing it to normal lenses like the Viltrox 35mm f1.7 or the Meike 55mm F1.8 Pro. Those are fast, sharp, affordable primes for actual photography. If you need a versatile zoom, look at the Sony FE 24-240mm. It's stabilized, has a wider aperture range, and costs a fraction of the price. The Panasonic 14-140mm is a fantastic all-in-one for Micro Four Thirds. The DZOFILM X-Tract exists in a completely different universe; it's a specialty tool competing with other ultra-niche cine gear, not consumer lenses.
| Spec | DZOFILM DZOFilm X-Tract 18-28mm T8 FF Probe Zoom Lens (0° | Meike Meike 50mm F1.8 Full Frame AF STM Lens Standard | Viltrox VILTROX 35mm F1.7 Lens, X Mount 35mm F1.7 Auto | Canon Canon - RF28-70mm F2.8 IS STM Standard Zoom Lens | Panasonic Panasonic LUMIX G Vario 14-140mm f/3.5-5.6 II | Fujifilm VILTROX 25mm F1.7 f/1.7 AF Lens for Fuji X Mount, |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Focal Length | 18-28mm | 50mm | 35mm | 28-70mm | 14-140mm | 25mm |
| Max Aperture | — | f/1.8 | f/1.7 | f/2.8 | f/3.5 | f/1.7 |
| Mount | — | Nikon Z | Fujifilm X | Canon RF | Micro Four Thirds | Fujifilm X |
| Stabilization | false | true | true | true | true | true |
| Weather Sealed | false | false | false | false | false | false |
| Weight (g) | — | 301 | 301 | 499 | 27 | 400 |
| AF Type | — | STM | STM | Autofocus | — | STM |
| Lens Type | Zoom | — | — | Standard Zoom | Telephoto | — |
Verdict
Here's the clear recommendation: unless you are a professional filmmaker or DP who has a shot list that specifically calls for a zooming probe shot, you should not buy this lens. It's too expensive, too slow, and too limited for anyone else. If you are that filmmaker, you already know why you need it, and no other lens does this. For everyone else, hard pass.