How much are you using the 40mm pancake?

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Jan 13, 2013
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Truth be told, I purchased the 40mm pancake lens only because I found the lens to be "cute". The lens has been sitting idle since the purchase and has only been taken out of the dry-cabinet only when I know that I will need to hand over the 6D + 40mm combo to be used as a P&S in parties.

How much to you guys use the 40mm?
 
I'll put my hand up too. ???

In hindsight I bought the 40 for it's novelty value. Who could pass up an EF lens with a nickname like "Shorty McForty"?
All for under $200. Wow! And it's a functional body cap...

After the first week which was a holiday down the coast, it sits unused. Thanks for the reminder. I'll sell it.

Now if it had been a 22mm pancake....

-PW
 
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bainsybike said:
neuroanatomist said:
I use it reasonably often. When I'm heading out with the 600 II, 100-400 or 70-200 but no pack, I slip the 40/2.8 into my pocket for when I need a wider AoV.

And I suppose you slip the 600 II into the same pocket whilst using the 40/2.8? ;)

No, I don't want the birds asking if I'm really happy to see them. :o It just hangs from the BR strap and I hold the camera (with handstrap).
 
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I use it a great deal. Apart from being a very useful 'standard' lens it makes for a very good panoramic lens. If you use a 40 in portrait you get about the same field of view vertically as you get with a 24 in landscape vertically, stitch those together and you get a wider 24 mm view. Also the very short length gives a shallow nodal point so I find I don't have to use a sliding panoramic head.

CR probably is an unwise place to mention it, but at BP we've sold our 35L because these little 40's are so good.
 
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I find it to be a great lens for shooting the night sky. Not super wide of course, but being fast it will get you a lower ISO. I also find it to be a great pano lens. I appreciate the scene compression of a slightly longer focal length then my wide angle, and the IQ is very good. I don't use it all the time, but for the price and the size in my pack.... it's worth holding onto.
 
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I sold mine.

I am using a 1.6x crop body and found that the new F/2.8 28mm IS USM gave better picture quality while being nearly as small and light. I realize there is a difference in focal length, but for crop the 28mm is a better normal lens anyway...

On a full frame I can see the focal length being more useful but with the new price reduction the f/2 35mm IS USM has better quality and isn't that much larger/heavier.

I also found the 40mm pancake's focusing to be subpar, better than micromotor but significantly worse than Ring USM or Screw STM (as in the 18-135mm).
 
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I purchase the 5d3 in Hong Kong, they have promotion free the 40mm pancake, i just used it for a few hour and sold it.. at f2.8, i better use the 24-70.. and the bokeh is not that great. And i feel that the camera looks quite funny when mounted the lens, it attracts quite alot of attention in hong kong. However, it is quite sharp.
 
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I use it as a walking around lens on my 5D3 when I don't want to have the weight and bulk of my 24-105 on my neck. I find that the light weight makes it easy to stabilize the camera and give me sharp images. I used to think that a heavy lens did that!

With the resolution of the 5D3, I can crop to simulate the FOV of a longer lens. I can also use the high ISO capability to compensate for the modest aperture.

Here are some shots I took with the 40 several months ago. It turned out to be the perfect focal length for an indoor motorcycle show.

1/200 F/3.2 ISO 3200
p1423994810-4.jpg



1/200 F/3.2 ISO 1600
p1423994812-4.jpg
 
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Its become my "standard but slightly wide" lens. I don't use it all the time, but at parties, for a happy snapper lens, its great. Doesn't attract attention (although the 5D3 with grip does ;) ), and its a sharp lens. Used it last night at a function where I wanted to wander around taking group shots without the flash. ISO 1600 @ f3.2 was perfect. And good as a pano, as someone has already mentioned.
 
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With the Pancake on I can slip my 5D2 into a backpack easily, so it's pretty much stuck on there permanently. It does landscapes, portraits of multiple people, and it takes good close-ups with a crop sensor.
And it's as sharp as most L glass at the same aperture, and it's virtually free (10x less than most L lenses) when you catch a good sale.
 
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