MM-5500 said:Thanks Packlight for your reply. read the article and it was helpful. will be buying the lens later, wish me luck!![]()
MM-5500 said:Since there are reports of large variance in copy sharpness with the 24-70L ii,
mrmarks said:MM-5500 said:Since there are reports of large variance in copy sharpness with the 24-70L ii,
Where did you get this from? I would say in most cases, it is the user using some inaacurate method to assess and drawing some inaccurate conclusions. I think Canon's QC is pretty tight, and the 24-70L2 has a much better design than its predecessor to prevent element decentering. There was an article somewhere showing a teardown of the lens and the design was shown to be really robust. I got mine off the shelf randomly and no issues so far. Pretty pleased.
mrmarks said:Sure, there's always some statistical distribution in any manufacturing (within SPC and specification limits) but as said in the review: "But I think you’d agree in real photographs it will probably be impossible to see the difference"
infared said:I purchased a copy of the lens yesterday from B&H, which will arrive tomorrow, (if I can hunt down John, my UPS driver...$2300-signature required! LOL!). Now you guys have me all paranoid that I could get a bad copy!...as I recall, didn't Roger at Lens Rental test 5 or 6 copies and although he found variance in the copies, it was quite minimal and that he found all of the lenses to be aceptable in real world shooting?
I think a zoom lens HAS to have variance from copy to copy just because of variance in the zoom mechanism itself, say as opposed to a prime lens with no zooming mechanics...... There will be inherently more variance in zoom lenses in general just by the nature of the design. Kind of comes with the turf.
infared said:I purchased a copy of the lens yesterday from B&H, which will arrive tomorrow, (if I can hunt down John, my UPS driver...$2300-signature required! LOL!). Now you guys have me all paranoid that I could get a bad copy!...as I recall, didn't Roger at Lens Rental test 5 or 6 copies and although he found variance in the copies, it was quite minimal and that he found all of the lenses to be aceptable in real world shooting?
I think a zoom lens HAS to have variance from copy to copy just because of variance in the zoom mechanism itself, say as opposed to a prime lens with no zooming mechanics...... There will be inherently more variance in zoom lenses in general just by the nature of the design. Kind of comes with the turf.