Canon EF 24-70 f/2.8L II Patent?

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YoukY63 said:
Anyone know if it is common for Canon to publish a patent about a product not on the market until months?

Well, if you dig in the CR archives a bit, you'll find that patents related to the batch of lenses announced in September were published in Dec 2009/Jan 2010. Of course not all of those patents have materialized and for those that did materialize, the final product might be quite different from the one described in the patent; so while this patent is an indication that a new 24-70 could be coming, it doesn't really say much about when it will come out.
 
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I don't think anyone has to worry about Canon not putting is in the new version. Canon would be stupid not to put is in the new lens. For 3 years people have been bitching about no is so if they didn't put is in the new lens no one would upgrade to it
 
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remy.brooks said:
IFor 3 years people have been bitching

Vocal minority? Not that IS wouldn't be nice, but I would rather the lens be sharper overall and suffer less distortion at extreme ends then have IS. Both would be great, but I wouldn't cry if it lacked IS. It is more of a wide lens which doesn't require as much IS as larger zoom lenses.
 
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UngerPhotography said:
remy.brooks said:
IFor 3 years people have been bitching

Vocal minority? Not that IS wouldn't be nice, but I would rather the lens be sharper overall and suffer less distortion at extreme ends then have IS. Both would be great, but I wouldn't cry if it lacked IS. It is more of a wide lens which doesn't require as much IS as larger zoom lenses.

I 2nd that.

I already have the existing 24-70, and would like to upgrade it for a newer model with better image quality and, as far as possible, less weight. IS would be nice, but improved image quality and price are more important to me.
 
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MCK said:
What will be the price for such one and when is it on the marked ?

Canon has been using new product introductions on lenses to adjust their pricing upwards. The dollar has fallen quite a bit since in the last few years, so it makes sense they will raise the price. My guess is they will price it close to $2k USD. They could also keep the current lens in the lineup as a non-IS lens if the new lens has IS.
 
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I'm not sure why a patent application for the design & construction of a lens has to have every single design point included. The IS part of a lens is already covered by patents, and new patents have to cover something new & original.

There is another point to consider - Canon offer 2 different 70 - 200mm lenses, and offer them in IS & non IS versions. There is nothing here to show that Canon can not / will not offer similar in the 24 - 70mm f/2.8 satisfying budgets and market demand.
 
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Flake said:
I'm not sure why a patent application for the design & construction of a lens has to have every single design point included. The IS part of a lens is already covered by patents, and new patents have to cover something new & original.

There is another point to consider - Canon offer 2 different 70 - 200mm lenses, and offer them in IS & non IS versions. There is nothing here to show that Canon can not / will not offer similar in the 24 - 70mm f/2.8 satisfying budgets and market demand.

The is unit contains optics and thus is part of the optical path being patented. It might not be identified on the patent as a IS, but it needs to be included in the optics.
 
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Flake said:
Canon also patented a 600mm f/5.6 with what appears to be DO optics, but there's no explicit mention of IS, it would be really surprising if a lens like this didn't have IS.

I agree that any 600mm lens that will be produced will have IS. however, the version patented does not have IS.

Only a very few of a large number of patents make it to production.

Here is a translation of the 600mm DO patent application.

http://www4.ipdl.inpit.go.jp/Tokujitu/PAJdetail.ipdl?N0000=60&N0120=01&N2001=2&N3001=2010-145832
 
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