Waiting for 100~400mm f/4~5.6 IS II.

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leecheeyee said:
Waiting for 100~400mm f/4~5.6 IS II.

Probably at least 10 years, if ever. :o The current lens is f/4.5-5.6, so we'll either see an f/4.5-5.6 II an f/4-5.6 (no II, since aperture range is different). Assuming it's the latter, you'll have to wait for that lens to be updated.
 
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Until someone comes up with a better lens, Canon has no real incentive to improve a already good lens. Some people hve been reading the rumors and waiting for 8 years.

Nikon has also been rumored to be improving their relatively poor 80-400 lens. Nikon users would love to see something that could match the Canon 100-400mmL, they would also like a lens like the Canon 400mm f/5.6L.
 
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I used to wait for the 100-400 , but I got a 2tcIII on my 70-200 and it works wonders. Yes the AF is not as snappy, but hey it works pretty well for most sport events! The low ISO noise and AF on the 5D3 just does wonders in darker situations :)
I learned my lesson with waiting for the 24-70II for 3 years and now I probably have to wait some more for the price to drop a bit.
Not missing shots anymore :)
 
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Mt Spokane Photography said:
Until someone comes up with a better lens, Canon has no real incentive to improve a already good lens.

The 100-400L is a so-so lens. It's capable of great shots, but it has problems. Wide open, its sharpness varies with IS element position much more than it should. IS performance is terrible (I mean, really, really terrible). Handling is lousy because the natural place to put your hand is on the lock ring or AF ring. The AF ring should be farther out and not turned by turning the lock ring so you aren't accidentally manually focusing when you don't intend to be.

We're getting f/8 AF back, and we're getting higher pixel counts. We need a 100-400 that's designed with the 1.4x TC III in mind, that has vastly better IS and better handling, and that stays sharp wide open regardless of where the IS elements happen to be.

My 70-200/2.8L IS II with 2x TC III performs as well at f/5.6 and 400mm as does my 100-400L when the IS on the 100-400 is turned off. With the IS on, the 70-200 is more consistently sharp and has vastly better IS and handling.
 
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Lee Jay said:
My 70-200/2.8L IS II with 2x TC III performs as well at f/5.6 and 400mm as does my 100-400L when the IS on the 100-400 is turned off. With the IS on, the 70-200 is more consistently sharp and has vastly better IS and handling.

Copy issue? My 100-400mm performs very well, well enough that even with the 1.4xIII on it, I can make out the engraved numbers on a banded bird leg from several yards out.

Still...I would certainly like a weather sealed version with higher-rated IS and improved optics. But not so improved that I start regretting my purchase of the 600 II. :o
 
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neuroanatomist said:
leecheeyee said:
Waiting for 100~400mm f/4~5.6 IS II.

Probably at least 10 years, if ever. :o The current lens is f/4.5-5.6, so we'll either see an f/4.5-5.6 II an f/4-5.6 (no II, since aperture range is different). Assuming it's the latter, you'll have to wait for that lens to be updated.

Better start saving for the 200-400 with 1.4 built in as it looks to be current replacement
 
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I wouldn't wait. Just get the current version, which is very good. Or some equivalent. Rumors can persist for years before a new lens is released. So, just get the best available lens to suit your needs. I own the 100-400L. I would love better AF, weather sealing, modern IS and slightly better optics. But it is still one of my most used lenses.
 
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Lee Jay said:
Mt Spokane Photography said:
Until someone comes up with a better lens, Canon has no real incentive to improve a already good lens.

The 100-400L is a so-so lens. It's capable of great shots, but it has problems. Wide open, its sharpness varies with IS element position much more than it should. IS performance is terrible (I mean, really, really terrible). Handling is lousy because the natural place to put your hand is on the lock ring or AF ring. The AF ring should be farther out and not turned by turning the lock ring so you aren't accidentally manually focusing when you don't intend to be.

We're getting f/8 AF back, and we're getting higher pixel counts. We need a 100-400 that's designed with the 1.4x TC III in mind, that has vastly better IS and better handling, and that stays sharp wide open regardless of where the IS elements happen to be.

My 70-200/2.8L IS II with 2x TC III performs as well at f/5.6 and 400mm as does my 100-400L when the IS on the 100-400 is turned off. With the IS on, the 70-200 is more consistently sharp and has vastly better IS and handling.
I wonder if your lens has problems?
I've handheld my lens at 1/15 sec 400mm, and the IS came thru. Hardly what I'd call horrible. As far as handling, thats more a matter of what a person is used to, some like push-pull, some do not.
Most who own a 100-400mmL will tell you it is sharper at 400mm than their 70-200mk II plus TC, but not by a lot. The main issue is speed of AF, which also depends on the body being used.
 
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I use the 70-200 f/2.8 L IS II with the 2x III extender, and while it gives really great results, it falls shy of the 100-400 f4.5-5.6 L IS from what've I've seen comparing my shots with other folks.

that being said, the fact that the 70-200 + 2x comes as close as it does means I'm not interested at all in any other 400mm lens at f/5.6.

in terms of the update cycle, Canon does seem to be really cranking through the new/replacement lenses fairly quickly, so it's possible the venerable 100-400 shotgun will get replaced within the next couple of years. but if you need it anytime sooner than the end of 2014, I wouldn't hold my breath for it.

... still hoping the 400 f/5.6 L IS gets replaced by a 500 f/5.6 L IS ...
 
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