ajfotofilmagem said:A decade ago I've been dreaming of a 50mm Image Stabilizer. After I replaced my old Canon F1.4 by a Sigma Art, I'm no longer sure I would buy one.Proscribo said:Uhh.. I'm quite sure that it's A BIT different thing to put IS to a variable aperture zoom that is at max f/3.5 in wide end and f/5.6ish at 50mm, than what it is to put it into 50mm f/1.4... So far closest is sony 50mm f/1.8 IS for crop, IIRC.ScottyP said:Funny no one is going to pick up the dead-easy edge and just stick IS in a 50mm prime. Sure you can do without it (currently everyone does) but given the consumer appetite for it evidenced in camera forums, someone could sell a lot of units if they would just do it. If you can do it economically in a $199 kit lens you can do it anywhere.
I can still dream, but the reality is that a Canon 50mm Image Stabilizer with the same picture quality of the Sigma Art would cost more than $ 1500.
"Why is it that there are no optically image-stabilized lens designs at f/1.4?"
This has to do with a number of difficulties related to the way lenses focus light at small f-numbers.
Lenses that gather more light do so by increasing the cross-sectional area through which light rays are refracted. When we look through the rear of a lens, we are seeing the exit pupil, the diameter of which is inversely proportional to the f-number. The exit pupil diameter must be sufficiently large to achieve a particular light-gathering ability, regardless of what is going on anywhere else in the lens design.
The way optical image stabilization works is to use a group of corrective lens elements that are free to react to movement of the system to compensate for vibrations in real-time. This correction works in large part because these movements are small and the degree of displacement required is also small; however, another factor contributing to resultant image quality is that, because these IS elements are always present in the optical path, they must also permit an acceptably uniform degree of correction across the image plane.
Consequently, the problem with adapting IS technology to very fast apertures is that, say, at f/1.4, the correction is much more difficult to achieve than at f/2 or f/2.8, where in the latter case (1) the image-forming marginal rays are not so oblique; (2) the aberrations dependent on image height are not as severe; (3) the size of the IS group does not need to be as large (and therefore have less inertia). Remember, at f/1.4, the exit pupil diameter is sqrt(2) times as large as at f/2, and the required IS group must therefore be at least twice as large in area and at least 2.8 times as massive (conservatively).
It doesn't make a lot of sense optically to try to implement IS in a very fast lens, because the challenge of correcting marginal ray aberrations adequately even without such a group is difficult enough; requiring that a hypothetical IS group operating at f/1.4, at least 3x as heavy, to maintain image quality, is not economical. Does that mean it isn't possible? No. But is such a design going to deliver excellent results, or do it at a reasonable cost? I doubt it.
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