Canon Will Announce a Zoom Lens Faster Than F/2.0 in Late 2026

I'm aware, that's why I mentioned my experience with the old EF 70-200mm f/2.8 L, that took me to 200mm with IBIS alone, and using the adapter. I still had 2 stops of stabilisation - I always found that to be quite good, all things considered.
A RF lens would stand closer to the sensor, which would probably allow IBIS to be slightly more effective, perhaps even getting two stops at 300mm. I'd take that :)
I (still?!) own a decent copy of the [nonstabilized] TAMRON SP AF 70-200mm F2.8 Di LD IF Macro A001...and upon acquisition of an R5MkII body (months ago) I did a bit of (non-rigorous) testing of this lens.

The IBIS seemed to offer about two stops. To be honest, I was thrillled that a 15+ year old (adapted) third-party lens worked as well as it did on one of Canon's best new bodies.
 
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RF would give you better stabilization than an EF lens that does not have coordinated IS, but that has nothing to do with the flange distance.
I was talking unstabilised RF lenses. I'd gladly take a 200 to 300mm unstabilised RF lens if IBIS allowed me to drop shutter speeds to around 1/100th and, at least up to 200mm I know it does, because I paired my old EF 70-200mm f/2.8 L USM with my R6 for years and could easily get to 1/50th.
If sacrificing IS allowed new groundbreaking faster lenses, and/or more interesting zoom ranges, within these limits I'd happily accept such trade-off.

The IBIS seemed to offer about two stops. To be honest, I was thrillled that a 15+ year old (adapted) third-party lens worked as well as it did on one of Canon's best new bodies.
Exactly, I had a very nice experience too, with my old EF 70-200mm non-IS, in that regard. 1/50th was perfectly fine, and I could get some keepers at slower shutter speeds too, just not as consistently.
 
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