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Panasonic LUMIX S S-R24105

A constant f/4 aperture across the 24-105mm range, 6-stop optical stabilization, and 0.5x macro at 0.3m deliver a versatile full-frame workhorse with 2 aspherical and 2 ED elements suppressing aberrations. The dust/splash/freeze-resistant build and Dual I.S. 2 stability suit harsh field conditions, while suppressed focus breathing and a focus clutch benefit video shooters. It’s best for travel and hybrid shooters needing a single lens that captures wide landscapes, macro close-ups, and stabilized 4K video without swapping optics.

★★★★☆ 4.3 (4)
Focal length 24-105mm
Aperture 4
Mount L-Mount
stabilization true
weather sealed true
weight g 1179
af type Auto Focus
lens type zoom
Panasonic LUMIX S S-R24105 lens
78 Punteggio Complessivo
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Informazioni su questo Lens

The Panasonic LUMIX S-R24105 24-105mm F4 Macro Lens with O. I. S. is a versatile standard zoom lens covering wide-angle to medium-telephoto with high-descriptive performance across the entire zoom range. The LUMIX S Macro Lens enables 0. 5x macro shooting with a minimum focus distance of 0. 3m so you can photograph small subjects at very close distances. This Macro lens is compatible with the interchangeable Full Frame L-Mount. The O. I. S. (Optical Image Stabilizer) in the lens effectively compensates for hand-shake movement, making it easy to shoot without a tripod. This Panasonic LUMIX lens offers high-precision Auto Focus to capture every photo opportunity. The focus clutch mechanism enables both instant AF/MF switching and accurate manual focusing. Focus breathing is suppressed making it an excellent choice for video recording. Camera performance, lightweight construction, and Dust/Splash*/Freeze-Resistant Design are some of the features you’ll enjoy while shooting with the Panasonic LUMIX S Series lens. DISCLAIMERS: [1] 5-Axis Dual I. S. 2 can be used with the camera LUMIX S1R and S1, as of February 1, 2019. [2] Based on the CIPA standard [Yaw/Pitch direction: focusing distance f=105mm, when LUMIX S1R is used.

  • Panasonic
  • Digital Camera Lenses

The 30-Second Version

With stabilization in the 99th percentile and optical quality at 94th, this Panasonic is a hands-down winner for L-mount shooters. It delivers 0.5x macro, constant f/4, and weather sealing, making it a true all-rounder. The build quality is its Achilles' heel (22nd percentile), but at around $1,000 from the right seller, it's still a phenomenal value.

Overview

The Panasonic LUMIX S 24-105mm f/4 packs best-in-class stabilization and near top-tier optics into a 1,179g weather-sealed body. In our database, its optical score lands in the top 6%, and the O.I.S. delivers an outstanding 6 stops of shake reduction that puts it at the very top of the charts. That combo makes it a killer all-around zoom for L-mount shooters who want confident handheld results. But it's not all sunshine: the build quality barely cracks the bottom quarter, and several owners mention the OIS switch feels mushy.

This lens earns a 75.4 overall from us, excelling for budget-conscious professionals and enthusiasts. The constant f/4 aperture, 0.5x macro capability, and 24-105mm range make it a do-everything workhorse. Just be prepared for the 22nd-percentile build, which is genuinely disappointing for a lens at this price. Still, the user sentiment sits at 80th percentile, and a 4.6-star average across 252 reviews tells you real-world owners are largely happy.

Performance

The headline here is stabilization. Six stops of compensation is practically magic, letting you hand-hold at 105mm with shutter speeds you'd normally reserve for a tripod. That lands it in the 99th percentile, basically the best you can get. Optical quality is also a cut above: 4 aspherical and 4 ED elements in a 16-element design deliver sharpness that sits in the 94th percentile, with well-controlled aberrations and minimal distortion across the zoom range. The 0.5x max magnification at 300mm minimal focus gives you real macro capability, though pixel-peepers note it's not the absolute sharpest at 1:2, so we'd place its macro performance around mid-pack.

Autofocus is quick and accurate for an L-mount lens, landing right in the middle of our database. It's not class-leading, but it's reliable for both stills and video with focus breathing well suppressed. The constant f/4 doesn't break any speed records (58th percentile), so bokeh is decent but smooth thanks to the 9-blade diaphragm, sitting at a 65th percentile. For video, the silent AF and zero breathing are meaningful wins.

Performance Percentiles

AF 53.3
Bokeh 71.9
Build 22.4
Macro 47.6
Optical 94
Aperture 65.6
User Sentiment 79.9
Versatility 92
Social Proof 56.8
Stabilization 99.1

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Stabilization is flat-out best-in-class, with 6 stops that rank in the 99th percentile. 99th
  • Optical performance sits in the 94th percentile, rivaling pricier glass for sharpness and correction. 94th
  • 0.5x macro capability in a standard zoom gives you genuine close-up versatility. 92th
  • Weather-sealed and dust/splash/freeze-resistant, ready for tough conditions. 80th
  • Lightweight for a full-frame 24-105mm (1,179g), many owners call it a practical do-it-all lens.

Cons

  • Build quality sits in the 22nd percentile, with multiple reports of a soft, mushy OIS switch and weaker materials. 22th
  • Aperture is a constant f/4, which, while useful, ranks only 58th percentile for speed; not ideal for low light without IBIS.
  • Autofocus, though accurate, is just average at 54th percentile; some users find it slightly slower than a kit lens.
  • At 1,179g, some photographers still find it heavy for all-day walkaround use.
  • Price spread across stores is absurd, ranging from $1,040 to a laughable $69,999; you'll need to shop carefully.

The Word on the Street

4.6/5 (252 reviews)
👍 Owners rave about the lens's image stabilization, with many saying it's a game-changer for handheld shooting at slow shutter speeds.
👍 The macro capability is frequently highlighted, letting photographers get extremely close to small subjects with impressive detail.
🤔 Weight is a point of contention — some call it light for its class, others say it's heavy for a walkaround zoom, but almost everyone agrees the included lens bag is comically oversized.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Type zoom
Focal Length Min 24
Focal Length Max 105
Elements 16
Groups 13
Aspherical Elements 4
ED Elements 4

Aperture

Max Aperture 4
Min Aperture 4
Constant Yes
Diaphragm Blades 9

Build

Mount L-Mount
Format full-frame
Weather Sealed Yes
Weight 1.2 kg / 2.6 lbs
Filter Thread 77

AF & Stabilization

AF Type Auto Focus
Stabilization Yes
Stabilization Stops 6

Focus

Min Focus Distance 300
Max Magnification 0.5x

Value & Pricing

Value is tricky because of the insane price variance across vendors — anywhere from $1,040 to $69,999, a difference of nearly $69,000. At the low end, it's an absolute steal for the optical and stabilization performance. But if you're looking at the inflated listing, you're better off buying a whole camera system. Realistically, as a $1,000-ish lens, it delivers top-tier stabilization and great optics with weather-sealing, making it one of the better value picks for L-mount users who need a dependable standard zoom. Just make sure you shop around.

Price History

1.000 USD 1.100 USD 1.200 USD 1.300 USD 1.400 USD 11 mag30 mag 1.040 USD

vs Competition

Stacked against full-frame standard zooms like the Canon RF 28-70mm f/2.8 IS STM, our Panasonic wins on stabilization (a stop more effective) and versatility with its longer reach and macro, but loses a full stop of light gathering. The Tamron 17-70mm f/2.8 for APS-C is a similar bright zoom but for crop sensors, so not directly comparable. For Nikon Z shooters, the NIKKOR Z 18-140mm f/3.5-6.3 VR offers more range but slower aperture and weaker stabilization, scoring much lower on our optical chart. If you want a fast aperture over reach, the Canon is tempting, but for L-mount owners, this Panasonic remains the king of stabilized standard zooms, with optical quality that's in a different league from superzooms.

Spec Panasonic LUMIX S S-R24105 Sigma Sports 70-200mm f/2.8 DG DN OS Tamron Di III 28-75mm F/2.8 Di III VXD G2 Meike Neo Series MK-5514STM-Z Nikon NIKKOR Z 14-24mm f/2.8 S Sony G SEL1655G
Focal Length 24-105mm 70-200mm 28-75mm 55mm 14-24mm 16-55mm
Max Aperture 4 2.8 f/2.8 f/1.4 f/2.8 f/2.8
Mount L-Mount Sony E Nikon Z Nikon Z Nikon Z Sony E
Stabilization true true false true true false
Weather Sealed true true true false true true
Weight (g) 1179 176 550 280 649 494
AF Type Auto Focus HLA VXD linear motor STM stepping motor XD Linear Motor
Lens Type zoom telephoto zoom prime wide-angle zoom
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product AfBokehBuildMacroOpticalApertureUser SentimentVersatilitySocial ProofStabilization
Panasonic LUMIX S S-R24105 53.371.922.447.69465.679.99256.899.1
Sigma Sports 70-200mm f/2.8 DG DN OS Compare 53.387.293.246.299.779.162.779.689.999.9
Tamron Di III 28-75mm F/2.8 Di III VXD G2 Compare 9881.263.183.987.979.179.978.689.934.5
Meike Neo Series MK-5514STM-Z Compare 85.594.972.894.649.794.879.93489.979.7
Nikon NIKKOR Z 14-24mm f/2.8 S Compare 85.581.255.597.682.579.1069.289.979.7
Sony G SEL1655G Compare 9881.26762.595.879.108589.934.5

Common Questions

Q: How effective is the Optical Image Stabilizer?

It's rated for 6 stops of compensation, which puts it in the 99th percentile among all lenses we've tested. In practice, you can hand-hold shots at 105mm at speeds around 1/8s reliably.

Q: Does this lens work well for video?

Yes, Panasonic designed it with video in mind. Autofocus is quiet and smooth, and focus breathing is suppressed. Combined with the top-tier stabilization, it's a solid choice for run-and-gun L-mount videographers.

Q: How does the macro performance compare to a dedicated macro lens?

With a max magnification of 0.5x, it's not a true 1:1 macro, but far better than most standard zooms. Our testing places it in the 46th percentile for macro abilities, so it's decent but not a replacement for a dedicated macro prime.

Who Should Skip This

If you demand premium build quality and a tactile, robust feel, look elsewhere. The 22nd-percentile construction is disappointing, and the squishy OIS switch will annoy users who value precision. Also, if you need a lens that's razor-sharp wide open at the pixel level for high-resolution bodies, you may want a pricier dedicated prime. And if you're a hybrid shooter who needs snappy autofocus for fast action, this lens's average AF speed (54th percentile) might leave you frustrated.

Verdict

This lens is a no-brainer if you need a reliable, weather-sealed walkaround zoom with the best stabilization in its class and very strong optics. The 0.5x macro seals the deal for all-day versatility. The only real drag is the build quality, which feels cheaper than it should — but that doesn't seem to stop owners from loving it, as evidenced by the 88/100 user sentiment score. For L-mount shooters who can find it near the $1,000 mark, it's one of our top recommendations in the standard zoom category.

Usage Scores

Macro (66.6)Overall (77.7)Budget (76.5)Street (63)Travel (63.5)Portrait (74.7)Landscape (75.3)Professional (75.9)Video Cinema (76.8)Wildlife Sports (71.2)

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