Recently my Canon 16-35mm II got shattered in a freak accident during an event, it slipped right out of my fingers when I got it out of the bag and dived head first to the ground. Front element is completely shot, the zoom won't work and I hear ramblings inside the housing. Iy still takes pictures, very distorted as expected and AF seems to be working, totally unreliable I imagine.
Anyway I send it to Canon for repairs and expect a bill that it is not economical to repair. I called the gear insurance as well and they will cover it 100% no matter the cost, which is perfect.
Even in the worst case scenario where my lens is a total loss, I have to buy a new one and I am considering the F4 IS version as a possible replacement. Talking to the event shooters, I rarely shoot in brightly lit conditions, handheld, low shutter speeds and I am wide open 80% of the time with the mk II version and I am wondering how well the F4 IS performs. I lose a stop, but is the difference very noticeable if I bump the ISO a stop to compensate?
Anyway I send it to Canon for repairs and expect a bill that it is not economical to repair. I called the gear insurance as well and they will cover it 100% no matter the cost, which is perfect.
Even in the worst case scenario where my lens is a total loss, I have to buy a new one and I am considering the F4 IS version as a possible replacement. Talking to the event shooters, I rarely shoot in brightly lit conditions, handheld, low shutter speeds and I am wide open 80% of the time with the mk II version and I am wondering how well the F4 IS performs. I lose a stop, but is the difference very noticeable if I bump the ISO a stop to compensate?