There are some convincing reviews out there. TDP's ISO charts were the final drop. I think I have to start selling something ... :
Upvote
0
BozillaNZ said:Plastic zoom and focus rings, hmmmm, that's first in the the L world with a full plastic outer shell.
BozillaNZ said:Plastic zoom and focus rings, hmmmm, that's first in the the L world with a full plastic outer shell.
raptor3x said:BozillaNZ said:Plastic zoom and focus rings, hmmmm, that's first in the the L world with a full plastic outer shell.
That may be, but it has the best focus and zoom action of any L lens I've ever used.
BozillaNZ said:Plastic zoom and focus rings, hmmmm, that's first in the the L world with a full plastic outer shell.
These are the same people who miss glass shampoo bottles, I supposeBozillaNZ said:Then why are you guys so hung up to plastic body? The next 1D will be fully 'engineering' plastic too!
mackguyver said:These are the same people who miss glass shampoo bottles, I supposeBozillaNZ said:Then why are you guys so hung up to plastic body? The next 1D will be fully 'engineering' plastic too!. While metal is reassuring and has a nice heft to it, the plastics that Canon uses are top notch and in my experience, very durable.
dgatwood said:My one experience with a lens being completely destroyed by a drop was entirely the fault of using plastic for the filter threads. Had they used stainless steel or aluminum, it would have bent a little, and the filter would have shattered, and that's it. Instead, the filter threads shattered, and the lens filter (whose threads were made of metal as they should be) dug into the front glass. The cost of replacing the front glass was more than the lens was worth, so I considered it a complete loss and moved on, but I'm very wary of plastic parts on lenses these days as a result.
At the very least, filter threads on a lens should always be made of metal. Anything else is a hack.
BozillaNZ said:Plastic zoom and focus rings, hmmmm, that's first in the the L world with a full plastic outer shell.
ahsanford said:dgatwood said:My one experience with a lens being completely destroyed by a drop was entirely the fault of using plastic for the filter threads. Had they used stainless steel or aluminum, it would have bent a little, and the filter would have shattered, and that's it. Instead, the filter threads shattered, and the lens filter (whose threads were made of metal as they should be) dug into the front glass. The cost of replacing the front glass was more than the lens was worth, so I considered it a complete loss and moved on, but I'm very wary of plastic parts on lenses these days as a result.
At the very least, filter threads on a lens should always be made of metal. Anything else is a hack.
I understand your position, but I respectfully disagree. Lugging around heavier items sucks all the time as insurance for something that doesn't happen so often. I have had one straight drop of my gear in 10 years of shooting with SLRs (and everything was fine anyway).
romanr74 said:I'm honestly sick and tried of comments like "were made of metal as they should be" or "should always be made of metal"...
Ruined said:I agree - with a zoom lens if you drop it bad enough that it cracks or damages the plastic it will likely need to be sent in for service to be re-aligned anyway.