And now Photozone joins the conversation -- and this spurs an interesting conversation:
http://www.photozone.de/canon_eos_ff/877-canon_1635_4is?start=1
I'm glad we know have sharpness numbers to compare, because it speak to a concern of mine. I am reading that everyone who uses this lens finds it a sharpness improvement over the 16-35 F/2.8L II and 17-40 F/4L, especially in the corners.
But the
sample pictures I see do not give a ringing endorsement of sharper corners other than new lens has more useful corners
at larger apertures.
So I looked at PZ's sharpness data, and my eyes may not fooling me after all:
@ F/4 @ Widest FL:
(Center / Border / Corner)
17-40 F/4L: 3342 2730
1073
16-35 F/2.8 II: 3482 2945 2195
16-35 F/4L IS: 3540 2826
2556
@ F/8 @ Widest FL:
(Center / Border / Corner)
17-40 F/4L: 3278 2896
2197
16-35 F/2.8 II: 3249 2882 2744
16-35 F/4L IS: 3390 3023 2766
@ F/11 @ Widest FL:
(Center / Border / Corner)
17-40 F/4L: 3012 2760 2577
16-35 F/2.8 II: 3000 2734 2669
16-35 F/4L IS: 3059 2796 2614
And, without transcribing it all, the relationship on the longest FL end is similar. PhotoZone only gave it a 3.5 star (out of five) for optical quality, and with the numbers above, I can see why.
So -- were we to assume this data is correct (remember, PZ only gets one copy of a lens) -- we
might think that:
- The new lens will, in fact, not be sharper at the apertures landscape photographers shoot
- The new lens is sharper in the corners for more wide open apertures.
Do you folks buy this? For those who own the new 16-35 and either the old 16-35 or 17-40, have you had a similar experience?
- A