dash2k8 said:I had this lens before and thought it was a little better than the Canon version. Its price, I think, was not helping sales because a lot of white box versions of the Canon 24-105 were available at a lower price, and to the casual consumer, they will pick a "big brand" with lots of ads over a name that perhaps only the more advanced users know. Or maybe they just remember Sigma from the old days, before the Art series, and figured it to be a poor brand.
AcutancePhotography said:Weird. If you go to the Sigma site and pull up a list of their discontinued lenses, this lens does not appear on that list. If you pull up a list of their current lenses, this lens is still being sold (at least it appears that you can order it.
I can understand why Canon shooters would not choose this lens over the Canon version; but I would imagine that other system shooters might like it. If I were in the market for a zoom lens for my Nikon, I might have considered this lens.
jeffa4444 said:I would tend to agree that optically the lens was not really superior in real world photography to the Canon 24-105mm f4L and as the Canon lens is widely available as white box & good S/H ones on Ebay then the critical mass was likely not there for Sigma. Throw in the newly launched Canon EF 24-105mm F3.5-5.6 IS STM lens and the volume drops again.
Random Orbits said:This is a misstep with Sigma and their new product philosophy (Art/Contemporary/Sport). They had clear wins with the 35 and 50mm primes, but missed with the 30 for APS-C and now the 24-105. Sigma is a company like any other -- a new marketing scheme does not make them immune to missteps or not understanding the market properly.
AcutancePhotography said:Random Orbits said:This is a misstep with Sigma and their new product philosophy (Art/Contemporary/Sport). They had clear wins with the 35 and 50mm primes, but missed with the 30 for APS-C and now the 24-105. Sigma is a company like any other -- a new marketing scheme does not make them immune to missteps or not understanding the market properly.
I don't think Sigma had any real expectation of replacing Canon 24-105 with their 24-105. It would have been nice for Sigma if it did. But other camera systems lacked a good quality 24-105. I think that was the intended market, not Canon users.
We need to make sure that we are not just looking at this from a Canon-centric viewpoint.
AlmostDecent said:Although a bit better than the Canon L lens (slightly sharper and better contrast), it is also much heavier, and more expensive. So it is a tough sell, unlike some other 3rd party offerings like the Tamron 24-70 with VC. It also had some issues like lockups with the 6D if GPS was enabled, that took them almost a year to resolve. WOrse: to fix it you either need to spend a further $100 for the USB dock, or send it in for support.
On the Nikon bodies they had an edge in price over the 24-120 and in image quality, but ran into two other issues: the lens is a massive battery drain since it switches on the camera's metering for each shot and locks it on for 60 seconds. This was already true of the D800 bodies, and persists with the D600s and D750. This issue was never resolved. Users in events and other reported as much as 1% battery drain per minute.
AcutancePhotography said:Weird. If you go to the Sigma site and pull up a list of their discontinued lenses, this lens does not appear on that list. If you pull up a list of their current lenses, this lens is still being sold (at least it appears that you can order it.
Canon Rumors said:We’re now told that the lens is in fact discontinued and production has been halted forever....
Canon Rumors said:<p><a href="http://www.canonrumors.com/2014/11/sigma-24-105-f4-dg-os-art-production-on-hold/" target="_blank">We posted back in the fall that Sigma had halted production indefinitely of the relatively new 24-105 f/4 DG OS lens</a>. We’re now told that the lens is in fact discontinued and production has been halted forever.</p>
<p>There was no word as to why it was discontinued, I can only assume the market for a 24-105 on the Canon side is extremely saturated and that the Sigma wasn’t a big enough leap forward in terms of optical quality to purchase over the “kit” lens from Canon. There’s also a possibility the cost of production was too high to keep the price competitive.</p>
<p>We’re still waiting on an official release about this from Sigma.</p>
<p><strong><span style="color: #ff0000;">c</span>r</strong></p>
<p> </p>
Maximilian said:AcutancePhotography said:Weird. If you go to the Sigma site and pull up a list of their discontinued lenses, this lens does not appear on that list. If you pull up a list of their current lenses, this lens is still being sold (at least it appears that you can order it.
Canon Rumors said:We’re now told that the lens is in fact discontinued and production has been halted forever....
I don't read the CR note as "there is a press release or an official information that..." but as "a hidden source told us, that...".
So this is a rumor likely to be true. But nothing official.
Maybe this will come within time, or will kept quitetly hidden or maybe it's not true. We'll see...
bholliman said:When Sigma introduced this lens I figured it would need to be optically excellent to differentiate itself from the very good and inexpensive Canon L options (24-70/4 and older 24-105/4). According to the reviews, it was only slightly better then the 24-105L and similar optically to the 24-70/4L.