There will be “a lot” of new RF mount lenses from Canon between now and March 2024

Jul 21, 2010
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Since I am about to buy a 70-200 f/4, is it reasonable to assume a "f/4 L II" is on the horizon?
I doubt it, Murphy’s Law notwithstanding. Both of the existing RF 70-200 zooms are relatively young (as far as lenses go).

A new 70-200/2.8 seems likely, but the current one would remain in the lineup The new one will have the Z designation. I suspect that Canon added that designation to the new 24-105/2.8 in part because they need to distinguish the 70-200/2.8 Z from the current one.
 
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Dragon

EF 800L f/5.6, RF 800 f/11
May 29, 2019
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I doubt it, Murphy’s Law notwithstanding. Both of the existing RF 70-200 zooms are relatively young (as far as lenses go).

A new 70-200/2.8 seems likely, but the current one would remain in the lineup The new one will have the Z designation. I suspect that Canon added that designation to the new 24-105/2.8 in part because they need to distinguish the 70-200/2.8 Z from the current one.
I saw one description that said the 24-105/2.8 is electronically parfocal, which makes a lot of sense and that would be true for a 70-200Z as well.
 
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koenkooi

CR Pro
Feb 25, 2015
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I saw one description that said the 24-105/2.8 is electronically parfocal, which makes a lot of sense and that would be true for a 70-200Z as well.
I find that to be disappointing, during the RF announcement blaze in 2018 Rudy Winston said that every lens would be electronically parfocal due to the new&fast mount.
It was an off-hand comment during a livestream, but still…
 
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Jul 21, 2010
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March is coming up quick and so far we have...zero new lenses.
Between ‘Now’ and March 2024 in this context means between August 2023 (when this thread was started) and March 2024. You need to work on your counting skills, or check a calendar, or maybe you just missed a few announcements (one in October, three in November).
 
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What does that even mean? Electronically par focal.
Means that on zoom lenses, while you manually zoom, the lens itself moves the focus motor to compensate the change in magnification and keeping the subject in focus without any re-focus action (manual of via AF) from the operator. Cine zooms are usually done to be optically parfocal, while for photo lenses is less important; so some new photo lenses can be made electronically parfocal without messing with optical scheme design as you would do for a cine lens.
 
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