FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thypoch
enters autofocus market with Voyager 24-50mm f/2.8 for Sony E-mount
The
first full-frame autofocus zoom developed by a Chinese optical brand,
in a constant f/2.8 internal-zoom design
Shenzhen, China, May 14th,
2026 -
Thypoch proudly announces the Thypoch
today announced the Voyager
24-50mm f/2.8, the first full-frame
autofocus zoom developed by a Chinese optical brand and Thypoch’s first
AF lens. Built for Sony E-mount mirrorless cameras, the Voyager uses an
internal zoom mechanism that holds physical length fixed across the
focal range, with a constant f/2.8 aperture from 24mm through 50mm.
Three
Primes in One Lens
A photographer working with primes typically carries 24mm, 35mm, and
50mm. Those three focal lengths cover the working distances that define
documentary, reportage, environmental portrait, street, and event
photography. The 24mm captures a full scene when there isn’t room to
step back. The 35mm sees roughly the way the eye sees, which is why it
remains the working perspective of reportage and documentary
photography. The 50mm isolates a subject without flattening the space
around it.
The 24-50mm range was chosen as a balance of size, design, and price
point. It covers the focal lengths working photographers reach for
daily. The Voyager fits an internal zoom mechanism, holds f/2.8 across
the range, and stays compact enough to live on the camera all day.
The Voyager is designed to deliver image quality comparable to a
dedicated prime across the zoom range, whether the working perspective
is the breadth of 24mm, the reportage view of 35mm, or the subject
isolation of 50mm. The result is one lens that does the work of three
primes, in the size and weight of one.
Fixed
Length, Constant Aperture
A fixed-length zoom that holds f/2.8 across the range removes two of
the most common interruptions in fast-paced shooting: rebalancing a
gimbal between focal lengths, and recalculating exposure as the
aperture shifts.
The Voyager’s internal zoom mechanism keeps the barrel length constant
from 24mm to 50mm. The center of gravity stays in place during a take.
The fixed barrel is also more mechanically stable in the hand than an
extending zoom, which translates to a steadier grip during handheld
work.
The f/2.8 maximum aperture is held throughout the zoom range. From dim
interiors and twilight streets to backlit portraits, f/2.8 delivers the
brightness and subject separation that working photographers need when
light is scarce. Exposure stays consistent across focal lengths. The
lens stays out of the way of the shot.
The fixed barrel also eliminates lens creep when the camera is stowed,
and removes the extending external moving parts that complicate weather
sealing on conventional zooms.
A
First for Chinese Optical Engineering
The Voyager is the first full-frame autofocus zoom developed by a
Chinese optical brand. Combining autofocus, full-frame image coverage,
and zoom architecture in a single lens requires coordinated development
across optical design, mechanical engineering, AF systems, and
electronics.
The Voyager’s autofocus system is designed for fast and quiet
operation. Thypoch built the AF unit to stay out of the way of the
shot, with response speed intended to keep pace with documentary,
street, and event shooting, and quiet operation suited to video work
and sound-sensitive environments. The lens features native Sony E-mount
autofocus, with support for eye AF, AF-C tracking, and in-camera and
lens-side AF/MF switching.
The lens has been tested with current-generation Sony Alpha bodies
including the ZV-E1, A7C2, A7CR, A7IV, A7V, A7RIV, A7RV, A7SIII, A9III,
and FX3.
Built
for Bokeh
Rendering character is where Thypoch has built its reputation, and the
Voyager carries that priority into autofocus. The optical design uses
16 elements in 13 groups, including 2 ASPH (aspherical) elements, 3 ED
(extra-low dispersion) elements, and 3 HRI (high refractive index)
elements. The formula is designed to control aberrations across the
frame at all focal lengths.
The 10-blade rounded aperture holds its circular shape across most of
the working aperture range, producing rounded out-of-focus highlights
at mid apertures and sunstar rendering at smaller apertures.
Optical,
Not Digital
The Voyager’s out-of-focus rendering is built into the glass, not added
in software. Optical bokeh behaves naturally at the edges of the frame,
around specular highlights, and in the transition zones that digital
blur tends to flatten. The result is depth that holds up at full
resolution and on close inspection.
The transition from sharp focus to background blur happens gradually,
the way a lens with character renders rather than the way a lens that’s
merely sharp does. Subjects sit forward in the frame with weight and
presence, separated from the background without the harsh cutoff that
flattens an image.
Sealed
at Every Joint
Weather sealing is the difference between a lens that works in the
conditions a photographer actually shoots in and a lens that has to be
protected from them. The Voyager is built with sealed construction at
the lens mount, focus ring, zoom ring, and front element. The internal
zoom design contributes to sealing integrity by removing the extending
external barrel that creates the most common point of moisture ingress
on conventional zooms.
The lens is developed for dust and moisture resistance. Whether the
shooting environment is coastal mist or a sudden urban downpour, the
Voyager is built to keep working. Paired with Sony’s own weather-sealed
Alpha bodies, the lens completes a sealed shooting system rather than
introducing a weak point in it.
Cinema
Zoom Heritage
The Voyager is Thypoch’s first autofocus lens. Its zoom architecture
draws on the parent group’s experience in cinema zoom lens engineering,
which includes constant-aperture and internal-zoom designs across
multiple cine lens families. Cinema zooms are the discipline in which
constant aperture and fixed barrel length were first solved as
engineering problems. The Voyager applies that discipline to a
stills-format AF lens.
Key
Specifications
- Focal length:
24-50mm
- Maximum
aperture: f/2.8 constant
- Optical
formula: 16 elements in 13 groups (2 ASPH, 3 ED, 3
HRI)
- Aperture
blades: 10 (rounded)
- Minimum focus
distance: 0.3m across the zoom range
- Maximum
magnification: 0.216x
- Filter thread:
φ67mm
- Weight:
432g
- Length:
92.88mm
- Maximum
diameter: φ73.6mm
- Mount:
Sony E
- Weather
rating: Dust and moisture resistance
Full specifications: https://dzolink.com/Voyager24-50mm
Price
and Availability
Launch price:
USD $619 / EUR €539 (May 14 to May 31, 2026)
MSRP: USD
$649 / EUR €569
The Thypoch Voyager 24-50mm f/2.8 is available
in Sony E-mount.
Standard package: lens body, front cap, rear cap, warranty card.
Local availability from:
Early June 2026
Where to buy:
https://thypoch.com/en/dealer
About
Thypoch
Derived from the Old English “thy” and “epoch,” Thypoch represents
the
idea of capturing your living epoch. In an era driven by automation and
clinical precision, Thypoch chooses to preserve the soul of
photography, merging 21st-century optical innovation with the
mechanical artistry of mid-20th-century craftsmanship. Guided by the
belief that photography is a mirror shaped by light and interpretation,
Thypoch designs lenses that extend the creator’s vision, because true
photography is not about perfection, but about preserving fleeting
moments that define our time.
For more information, please visit: https://thypoch.com.