ahsanford said:neuroanatomist said:ahsanford said:So I'm not calling that Nikon lens a gamechanger for IQ, it's just a gamechanger for first-party reach for the dollar in a zoom lens. It's the sort of lens that gets an amateur into birding.
Agreed - and for that reason, I can see Canon developing/releasing a similar lens.
Yes, but this patent may not be that lens. I agree with others that this will be clearly north of $2k for that speed at that FL range.
I've been arguing for Canon to make that similar lens and fill that circled bucket below, but this lens will be priced out of that bucket, I believe. It would sit alongside the 100-400 II as longer variant. No chance it's a cheapo reach lens.
- A
An uninformed guess but using your "this patent may not be that lens" coupled with your chart with a gap for a slow, cheap super-telephoto I would think a 200-600 f?-6.3 non-L could be likely.
- 600 / 6.3 = 95. That's a front element that makes the lens able to compete price-wise with the 3rd party solutions and is the only way Canon can get the price close to the Nikon and 3rd party options.
- keeps people buying the 200-400 1.4, which would be made rather (more) niche otherwise.
- keeps the 100-400 popular
- Canon loves focal length one-upmanship over Nikon:
- 18-135 vs 18-105
- 55-250 vs 55-200
- 200-600 vs 200-500?
My view is that the patent represents one of the options they've explored and the patent for and f6.3 formula is either covered already in that patent (just scale it down?) or, due to reasons of commercial sensitivity and the simpler 'we were working on it for longer', was submitted later so has still not been published.
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