Canon EF 70-200mm f4 IS USM L

CNET Editors' Rating

4.0 stars
    Overall score: 8.3 (4.0 stars)

Excellent

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5 reviews

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Canon EF 70-200mm f4 IS USM L - FT
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  • Canon EF 70-200mm f4 IS USM L - FT

CNET Editors' Review

CNET Editors' Rating

4.0 stars Excellent
    Overall score: 8.3 (4.0 stars)
  • Design: 9.0
  • Features: 8.0
  • Performance: 8.0
  • Image quality: 8.0
Edited by: Lori Grunin

The good: Professional grade build quality, including dust and moisture sealing; four stops of image stabilization system; relatively lightweight.

The bad: The tripod collar is optional; relatively expensive.

The bottom line: The Canon EF 70-200mm f4 IS USM L lens is a professional grade 70-200mm lens without the size and heft, as well as price, as found in f2.8 versions.

Review:

You want a medium telephoto lens for your Canon dSLR, something with a constant aperture, solidly built with pro quality, yet light enough to carry on adventure to some faraway part of the world. You have looked at the f2.8 models but didn't think you could afford them or the Sherpa to carry them. The Canon EF 70-200mm f4 IS USM L lens might be just what you're looking for. Its light weight, professional quality, along with its practical focal range make the lens ideal for travel, expeditions, and photojournalism. It has Canon's EF lens mount, ... Expand full review

You want a medium telephoto lens for your Canon dSLR, something with a constant aperture, solidly built with pro quality, yet light enough to carry on adventure to some faraway part of the world. You have looked at the f2.8 models but didn't think you could afford them or the Sherpa to carry them. The Canon EF 70-200mm f4 IS USM L lens might be just what you're looking for. Its light weight, professional quality, along with its practical focal range make the lens ideal for travel, expeditions, and photojournalism. It has Canon's EF lens mount, making it compatible with all of Canon's digital SLRs, full-frame and APS-C, as well as all Canon EOS film SLRs. The version is the same size as its non-IS sibling, only slightly heavier; its price is about 45 percent lower than the IS version's approximately $1,100 price tag, though. Along with the 70-200mm f4 IS USM L, Canon offers other professional L-series lightweight zooms, including the 24-105mm f4 IS USM L, and the 17-40mm f4 USM L.

Design
 Part of Canon's L series of lenses, offering professional grade durability, with its signature putty-colored finish.
 Utilizes a ring-type USM (ultrasonic motor) for fast and quiet autofocusing.
 Has a maximum aperture of f4 through the entire zoom range, and a minimum aperture of f32.
 Circular aperture diaphragm for better blur characteristics when shooting at wider apertures. (The quality of rendering in shallow-depth-of-field is known as bokeh.)
 When mounted an APS-C sensor-sized dSLR, such as the EOS 50D or the EOS Rebel XSi, it has a 35mm-equivalent focal length of 112 to 320mm.
 Weighs 27.2 ounces, is 6.8 inches long and 3 inches in diameter.
 There is a distance scale window, with scales in both feet and meters. For those who like to shoot infrared, there are special infrared focusing marks (displayed in red) for focusing at 70mm and 100mm. These are necessary because infrared light focuses at a slightly different point than daylight.
 The lens is moisture and dust sealed, with an O-ring at the lens mount that creates an almost completely weather-proof seal when mounted on an EOS-1xxx series body.

Features
 Constructed with one fluorite lens element and two UD (ultralow dispersion) elements for maximum sharpness and clarity. Also, uses Canon's Super Spectra coatings to reduce ghosting and flare.
 Only lead-free glass is used in its manufacture.
 Canon's optical image-stabilization system, with up to four stops of correction. There are two IS modes, selectable via a switch on the lens barrel. Mode 1 corrects for movement along both the horizontal and vertical axes. Mode 2 turns off the horizontal correction to accommodate panning.
 There is a two position focus-limiter switch. One sets the focus range from 1.2 meters (its closest focusing distance) to infinity and the other sets it from 3 meters to infinity. This is handy when you are shooting beyond 3 meters because this way the lens doesn't have to work so hard, and makes it less likely to accidentally focus on any objects in the immediate foreground.
 It comes well accessorized with a lens hood and a soft drawstring pouch.

Hands-on
Weighing just more than 27 ounces, its light weight makes it very comfortable to handhold, especially compared with Canon's almost twice as heavy f2.8 version. That, along with the IS, make a tripod or a monopod unnecessary in most cases. It doesn't come with a tripod collar like the f2.8 version, although you can buy one (#2889A002) for about $115. It feels easily maneuverable, focuses fast, and doesn't weigh you down, even after a long day of shooting. Although its 47.3-inch closest focusing distance precludes any macro work, you won't miss it. With its IS capable of up to four stops of correction, someone typically shooting at 1/250 second should theoretically be able to shoot handheld as slow as 1/15 second and still get a blur-free image. The IS automatically switches off when the camera is placed on a tripod.

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Average User Rating

4.5 stars out of 5 user reviews

Rating Breakdown

  • 5 star: 4
  • 4 star: 1
  • 3 star: 0
  • 2 star: 0
  • 1 star: 0

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Most recent user reviews

Showing 3 of 5 reviews

5.0 stars

"A fast shooting zoom with near prime sharpness" By Iamas_Hamed

Pros: Fast, silent zoom with incredible overall picture quality, pleasing bokeh, razor sharp pictures; constant F/4 aperture; light weight; good image stabilization; good zoom range for portraits and outdoor photography.

Cons: Price; F/4 may not be bright enough in some situations such as action photography or low light, indoor photography; no tripod collar for the price.

Summary: I recently got this lens off of craigslist for a relative bargain but it was still very expensive and stretching my lens budget. I've been shooting with it on my XSi, both outdoors and indoors. For indoor shooting, the camera's ISO settings need to be punched up a ... Expand full review

4.0 stars

"Solid, reliable and sharp." By forkboy

Pros: Relatively light weight. Fast focus. Internal zoom so front doesn't rotate making polarizing filters easy to use. Sharp images at all zoom settings. Image stabilization works as advertised.

Cons: Not as telephoto as one might think. No tripod mount ring. Manual focus ring too narrow.

Summary: I purchased this lens shortly after acquiring my Canon 40D in December 2007. I have been very satisfied with the lens in most every manner. It's not too heavy to work with for hours at a time. The auto-focus is both quick and accurate. The image quality is sharp ... Expand full review

Specifications

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Quick Specs

  • Product Description: Canon EF Telephoto zoom lens - 70 mm - 200 mm
  • Weight: 1.5 lbs
  • Lens aperture: F/4.0

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