Ruined said:
danski0224 said:
How is this lens considered fragile?
The motor that drives the front element forwards and backwards is prone to failure, especially as the front element extends outside the lens barrel when focusing; most designs like that are less reliable as accidentally not retracting the element in 100% and storing the camera lens down as most do can potentially cause damage/failure over time due to the weight/pressure being put on the focusing motor instead of the outer lens barrel. While some might call that careless, in the field or at an event things can get hectic and not retracting the front element 100% accidentally can happen more often than you'd think; the 50mm f/1.4 focus motor has similar reliability issues for the same reason. To make it worse, the 85L II barrel can't even be retracted unless the camera is turned on, so if you do make this error you have the hassle of turning the camera on/off just to dismount the lens properly. Also, the rear element is more exposed than any other in-production Canon lens I am aware of, exacerbated by the fact that the lens is not the easiest to mount in the field due to its giant rear barrel width; recall damage on the rear element is more likely to show up in the photo than damage to the front element. Finally, the lens is not weather sealed like most other Canon L lenses.
All of that combined adds up to a more fragile lens in the field to me that requires more babying compared to say a 24 f/1.4L II or 50L f/1.2L (weather sealed + no extending barrel when focusing + protected rear element) or 85 non-L/135L (not weather sealed, but still less vulnerable to damage due to barrels that do not extend when focusing and more protected rear elements).
Frankly, if Canon released an 85mm f/1.8 IS that fixed up some of the old 85mm f/1.8 minor issues (improved lens hood design, curved aperture blades, updated coatings, etc) I would probably forget about the 85mm f/1.2 line altogether - unless it was revamped to correct its functionality shortcomings in the field where I mostly shoot.
To be clear, it isn't the
motor that gets damaged. The USM in this lens is simply two rings, and there's no mechanical contact between them. It's not something that is prone to being damaged.
What can get damaged with this lens, like any other lens with a sub-barrel that extends during focusing, is the sub-barrel and cam assembly. With sufficient force, you could damage the components that hold the focusing group in place. You'd have to smack the front of the lens pretty hard when it's extended. I don't think that qualifies as "fragile"--any lens can be abused if you don't treat it with care.
That said, the design of the EF 85/1.2L necessitates extra attention in attaching the lens to the body (or else the rear element could be scratched), and remembering to set the focus back to infinity before removing the lens from the body (or else the barrel is stuck in an extended position, making the aforementioned damage more likely). Furthermore, the lens is fat, round, and very dense. It's one of the few Canon EF lenses in which the outer barrel was given a special textured finish that makes it less slippery and easier to grip, precisely because it is so easy to drop.